• @grue
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    901 year ago

    Removed by mod

    • @wwaxwork
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      311 year ago

      Just throwing out there, this was one generation out of however many to the dawn of time that was able to do this. And they did it on the backs of the hundreds of thousands of people that fought, starved and died to get unions established. For the vast majority of history, if you could work you worked man, woman & child because if you didn’t your family starved. Then people fought for generations to get unions established and they finally did it and one single generation got the advantages of it before the next generation decided they didn’t need no stinking unions as they were working white collar jobs and here we are. We’re not standing together so we’re falling together.

    • @doomer
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      51 year ago

      You know what else changed? On-the-job training is now practically unheard of. The kind where the company invests in employees and their development.

    • @suspecm
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      41 year ago

      To be fair, the reason every job nowadays requires a college degree is because so many people went to college. Before that, the boomers were coasting on with barely a high school degree but they tought that by pushing their kids to get college degrees, they can help them achieve more wealth (and by extension, themselves). This combined with the fact that they basically directly contributed to the erosion of unions (it was a very common thing that an employer/union leader paid off by a company offered boomers a deal where they get a higher pension but it would not apply to anyone born after 2000 or something; of course they took those deals because they are the “me me me generation”, who has the foresight of a hampster) and then they are deliberately oblivious to the fact that young people can’t achieve anything career wise because they don’t have strong unions backing them up. No unions, no better pay, no better working conditions, no guarantied good deal on pension and insurance, etc etc.

      As a side note, in the US at least there is a reason many advise people to just learn a trade instead of getting a college degree. Trades are in high demand, has been for a good while and probably will be for decades.

    • Drusas
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      391 year ago

      Hillary didn’t rob him of it; the Democratic Party robbed him of it.

      • kokoapadoa
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        281 year ago

        Because of America’s dogshit election system, she won the popular vote.

        • @Gradually_Adjusting
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          71 year ago

          I’d give anything to go back in time and see how that election goes differently with an Approval Vote.

          • justhach
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            241 year ago

            Honestly, a candidate like Trump was not an “if” but a “when”.

            Even if the Dems had won that election, history has shown they they would not have made any real.changes. They would have done nothing to try and prevent something like the Trump Presidency from happening. They wouldnt have tried to fix the rigged gerrymandered districts, they wouldn’t have pushed for voting reform, they wouldn’t have tried to call put the insane rhetoric being put out by right wing propaganda machines, and they wouldn’t have instilled better checks and balances on the presidency that relied on more than the assumtions of common decency, respect, and tradition.

            Nah, they would have rested on their laurels for electing the first female president, and be caught with their pants down when the GOP successfully harnessed the resentment of angry white men for being “under the rule” of a black muslim socialist for eight years, and a satanic pedophile child eating woman for 4.

            • partial_accumen
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              121 year ago

              Even if the Dems had won that election, history has shown they they would not have made any real.changes.

              THREE Supreme Court justices would have been very different today. Thats going two have repercussions for the next 3 generations.

              • justhach
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                1 year ago

                Fair point.

                I guess the bigger point I was trying to make is that someone like Trump would have happened regardless of what happened in 2016. Maybe not him specifically, but this has been the work of right wing propaganda machines for 30+ years. If not in 2016, then 2020, and if not then 2024, etc.

                The fractures in American society are so deep that I cannot see any real unity in that country ever again.

                • partial_accumen
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                  41 year ago

                  I guess the bigger point I was teying ti make is that someone like Trump would have happened regardless of what happened in 2016.

                  I agree with that.

                  There were even those that didn’t support his “policies” when he ran, but wanted to “burn it all down” and get him elected to shake up the system. I surely hope those that did so under that reason regret the impact.

    • @CallMeDuracell
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      141 year ago

      I wanted to believe this during the 2016 party primary like I needed to breathe. Hell, I STILL want to believe it. But the reality is that the American people robbed us of his presidency.

      2016 was one of the first elections where Gen X, Gen Z, and Millennials collectively outvoted the boomers and the silent generation, by the slimmest of margins. It goes without saying how much the older generation drinks from of the neo-liberalism kool-aid. A self-professing socialist was always going to be a hard sell.

      As far as the 2016 Democratic primary goes, Bernie got 1820 pledged (elected) and 45 unpledged (super/unelected) delegates. To win by one delegate, he would have needed to get 518 additional super delegates to overcome Hillary’s pledged delegate lead over him. A win from him would have caused an outrage, since the unelected delegates would have overridden the elected (read: will) of the Democratic primary voters.

      The most important thing American voters can do is to continue to demonstrably show how neo-liberal socio-economic politics is marching us to generational ruin to every voter you know, and then vote appropriately in every local, state, and federal election.

    • @Hypersapien
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      111 year ago

      It was the Democratic establishment and the corporate media that stole it. The biggest thing they fear is a candidate that puts the American people over corporate interests.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      And then Biden did it 4 years later.

      See the pattern? Combined with all the “left” side of democrats support for US imperialism.

      Bernie and people like him ain’t gonna change shit, not any more in the future that they did in a past decades. It’s time to radicalise way beyond him and the lukewarm electoral socialdemocracy, the only thing that can change something for the better, and did in the past, is the organised working class.

      • AnonTwo
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        1 year ago

        As much as I hate to say it, Democrats would’ve just lost even harder if the vote was divided. He did the right thing at the time, the democrat party never would’ve backed down on Hillary back then.

        That entire election was egos that overestimated how things would go.

      • @Cybermass
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        111 year ago

        I would love that! Can someone skilled in graphics software do it?

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Overlay that chart with corporate profits and it all makes sense. It would be the same chart because productivity surplus is going to corporate profits but that’s not really the cause.

        • relay
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          21 year ago

          Why is there a Hyack quote at the end of that page?

          • @[email protected]
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            -21 year ago

            Why is there a Hyack quote at the end of that page?

            Are you really asking why there is a quote about government funny money on a page entirely dedicated to the problems made by government funny money?

            • relay
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              41 year ago

              I don’t think only the only factor of inflation is going off of the gold standard.

              The printed money was used to crush any social change around the world in fear of other socialist states forming in the supposedly “cold” war. Also, crushing unions reduced the percentage of pay that workers got for their labor, increasing that pay gap.

              Corporations bribing governments allowed free trade across borders to countries with weaker environmental regulations. The corporations layed off and de-industrialized the USA while keeping the ability to profit from the hyperexploited labor of developing nations.

              if you are citing Hyack who advocated for government regulations to favor businesses, why would any of these corporations not write the laws to crush small competitor competition, crush unions, control the federal reserve? The return on investment of lobbying the government to make moves in a corporation’s favor is quite impressive. Why do you think that the boards of these corporations would not persue what is most profitable?

      • @rektdeckard
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        31 year ago

        Incredible. But what actually did happen to cause the wealth gap to suddenly and rapidly start to widen?

        • sobuddywhoneedsyou
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          1 year ago

          Probably something related to the bretton woods conference. That is the only major economic event that took place around that time that I can think of.

          Edit: I meant the bretton woods system being dissolved. The coference happened much earlier sometime in the 1940s.

        • @[email protected]
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          -11 year ago

          Getting off the Gold Standard.

          If you were paid 1/20th of an ounce of gold per hour in 1971 you’d get about $2/hr. (~$15 in 2022) (gold @~40/oz)

          Today if you were paid that same gold per hour you’d be getting about $1,000/hr (gold @~$20k).

          After dropping the gold standard people, paid the same amount of dollars, could suddenly buy less than they could when the dollar was backed by gold. Because they printed more money all the money was worth less.

          Look at the stagflation we have going on now. The economy is stagnating but the central banks keep printing money which devalues it.

          If you’re not getting 2% interest on your money then you’re losing money in real terms. And this is by design.

          “Inflation” is “monetary inflation”, that is an increase is the supply of the currency. On the central bank can cause M0 inflation. Commercial banks contribute to M2 inflation via fraction reserve lending.

          TLDR: We went off the gold standard and handed everything over to the bankers who immediately used, and continue to use, that power to enrich the upper class.

          Bring back bimetalism! Save the middle class!

          • @lanolinoil
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            11 year ago

            If anything can have value, which I think we’ve proven it can, why would gold and silver be the right foundations for money?

            Haven’t lenders and the people that forge coins been colluding since <1000AD?

      • @lanolinoil
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        11 year ago

        Where is the literature on why this all happened? It feels so much like a concerted effort by the elites, but where is the theory and leaked stuff on the plans and collusions, etc? Was this really just organic – Are we just going through a bronze age style collapse and can’t really see it being inside?

  • TwoGems
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    1 year ago

    deleted by creator

    • @TwystedKynd
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      1 year ago

      Finances aren’t the only difficulty in life. It’s not that simple and reducing down to just the financial aspect of life, while that aspect is important, is oversimplifying things. Don’t forget there were tons of poor boomers too. Only about 1/3rd ever saw a pension. Plus, try telling gay boomers, POC, women, people with mental and emotional issues, etc that they had it easier. They weren’t all middle class straight white men, and treating them as one homogenous group is disingenuous.

      • @doomer
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        1 year ago

        Plus, try telling gay boomers, POC, women, people with mental and emotional issues, etc that they had it easier.

        Doesn’t making necessities unaffordable affect all working class populations?

        I get what you’re saying, and agree in part, but depending on where you are in the US, a lot of the progress has really only been superficial - and over the same time working class purchasing power decreased and social safety nets decreased.

        Economics is an easy point of intersectionality for the working class, because it hurts us all. We can unite around that instead of dividing ourselves from it. It even hits the boomers, and I think we’re all aware that many of them are already skating on thin ice in retirement.

        There are no ‘easy times’ for some groups of people (and they deserve our utmost empathy) but I can’t help but see it like this: Throw in a minority identity, or a neurodivergency, or anything else that already makes life hard on top of this late stage capitalist economy, and 2020s are right out of a dystopian novel. At least in my opinion.

      • AFK BRB Chocolate
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        21 year ago

        I’m (barely) in the boomer generation, and I have a daughter who is 25, so I see the situation she has compared to what I had. I also have boomer employees and coworkers with younger kids. The cost of buying a house and paying for education is for sure a lot higher now compared to wages, and those are big quality of life factors.

        One thing I rarely see mentioned in these discussions is the availability of a safety net. My daughter has had to have a fair amount of help from us, as have most of her peers from their parents, and that sucks, but the fact of the matter is that it’s more of an option today than when I was young. Most of my friends have paid 100% of their kids’ education, and many if not most have helped with housing in one way or another. That was less viable when I was young. I was lucky that my parents paid for my education, but that wasn’t true for most of my peers at the time. When I left the house, it was made clear that there’s no going back.

        I’m in no way trying to say we had it hard or harder, just mentioning that there are a lot of factors that go into the situation.

        Oh, one other thing: I really believe that the current high cost of education is at least in part intended by older conservatives. Today’s conservative agenda relies on people voting against their own interests (it’s amazing that poor Midwestern farmers largely support tax cuts for the wealthy - it’s crazy). Making education something only wealthier people can afford and creating a giant media franchise that looks like news but is really conservative propaganda are two approaches to furthering that goal. We have to fix it, but there’s a bunch of people who actively don’t want to fix it because they’re happy with the situation.

    • Miqo
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      41 year ago

      I’ve been looking for work since losing my job in March. And all these lead-addled antiques keep saying, “nobody wants to work anymore.” These people couldn’t be any less attached to reality.

      • @TwystedKynd
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        31 year ago

        I can promise you this: for every boomer who says something like that, there’s another boomer who thinks that one is a douche.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Talked to a (old) boomer just yesterday during a BBQ. Everything from climate change denial to citing the Bible to … I don’t kinow, justify his hate of “weirdos” like gay and trans people.

      But he did admit that young people have it harder than him and that he would not be young in our current time.

  • BornVolcano
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    1 year ago

    Image Transcription: Twitter Post


    Bernie Sanders, @BernieSanders

    The Boomer generation needed just 306 hours of minimum wage work to pay for four years of public college. Millennials need 4,459.

    The economy today is rigged against working people and young people. This is what we are going to change.


    ^I’m a human volunteer transcribing posts in a format compatible with screen readers, for blind and visually impaired users!^

  • Discoslugs
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    181 year ago

    Bernie sanders screaming into the wind yet again.

    Bernie i love ya but nobody is gonna do the things you say.

    They are way too reasonable.

    • @ItchySunItchyKnee
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      161 year ago

      Isn’t that kind of defeatist?

      I don’t really have a horse in this race since I am not from the US.

      • @Furbag
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        31 year ago

        It’s more cynicism than defeatism. People from the United States have pushed for these kinds of common sense reforms for our entire lives and we still have nothing to show for it.

      • @graphite
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        11 year ago

        First you say

        Isn’t that kind of defeatist?

        Then,

        I don’t really have a horse in this race since I am not from the US.

        So, that’s the thing: after you have lived here long enough and seen all this shit happen, it’s much easier to have a cynical outlook on the whole situation.

        If you live in an area of the world where you feel as if you can actually improve things, I can kind of understand why you might be surprised.

        But, the US is kind of fucked.

        • @ItchySunItchyKnee
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          11 year ago

          I do understand having a cynical outlook on things. That is how I look at the state of policing in the US.

          And in my part of the world there are similar defeatist opinions, but through engagement with the community at large we (the people) are slowly able to change things for the better.

          Sometimes it feels like it’s one step forward but two steps back. That just means I’ll pick up speed and march on faster.

          • @graphite
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            11 year ago

            Sorry, it really doesn’t work that way here. People only have the capacity to accept the status quo and use whatever resources are available to them given their socioeconomic standing, which is fluctuating.

            Community based and state sponsored programs in the US are more often than not for show and nothing more.

            The rest is “oh, yeah, I voted for that”. 30% of the time something that’s good for for society might go through.

            There is far too much corruption in our system for the people to make a dent. That’s just the way it is.

      • Discoslugs
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        -31 year ago

        Lol i dont know what you mean really.

        • @markr
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          141 year ago

          He means basically you are shitting on the people actually trying to change things for the better. Your basic claim is that for some unknown reasons nothing can ever change. This is not the only way things can be, this is not the way things have always been. Change is possible.

          • @ItchySunItchyKnee
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            21 year ago

            Thanks for clarifying much better than I would be able to :) this is exactly what I meant and also the reason I added I’m not from the US, as not to step on anyone’s toes.

            Change is definitely possible. It has been happening for as long as I have been following American politics. Though the change has been (in my opinion) mostly in favour of rich old people. This should only strengthen our resolve to change things for the better.

          • Discoslugs
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            -21 year ago

            If yall think bernie sanders is going to make real change, y’all weren’t paying attention to the 2020 presidential race. Im oversimplifyng but Bernie had overwhelming support for Democratic Presidential nomination and the DNC went with Biden. This and a career long history of being overlooked. I would vote for bernie and his policies if ever made it anywhere but into memes.

            Your basic claim is that for some unknown reasons nothing can ever change.

            No. My claim that the US governemnt is not designed to bring about useful and rapid change. Prove me wrong.

            • Omega
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              21 year ago

              The Democratic Party is a lot more moderate than you think. I voted for Bernie, he lost.

              Bernie is a shining example of progressive ideals that has shifted the landscape. But he never going to get the support of the majority of Democrats.

              • Discoslugs
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                31 year ago

                Bernie is a shining example of progressive ideals that has shifted the landscape. But he never going to get the support of the majority of Democrats.

                Lol my student loans got shifted alright.

                Statements like these reaffirm my political stances. This system is working as intended and its miserable af. Lol

                This is why i am an anarchist.

                • Omega
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                  21 year ago

                  You know Biden is pushing for debt relief right? That’s Bernie shifting the landscape. Shift it enough, and you’ll get someone like Bernie.

                  Unless you want to go back to '90s Republican-lite Democrats.

      • @okamiueru
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        1 year ago

        As someone who lives in a country where Bernie’s political view would be considered far more right than left, yes. Reasonable.

        Imagine a politician with a good grasp of reality and actually wanting to improve the conditions for the people. Being right about all contentious issues for the past 3-4 decades… Then imagine instead electing an absolute narcissist moron who I would entrust with a single thing.

  • @QRay
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    121 year ago

    Can we keep the timestamp in when cropping a post from another website?

    • @NOPper
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      51 year ago

      7:29 AM · Apr 24, 2019 for the record.

  • @Ketchup
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    111 year ago

    I found my people. On Reddit this would have been on r/BernieSandersforpresident and I would have been the lostRedditor for suggesting otherwise

  • @FinalBoy1975
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    111 year ago

    This is very smart of him to use generational terminology to engage with young voters. He’s looking at trends on social media. Maybe it will work for him. His main obstacle is that most democrats are moderate and don’t have a problem voting republican if they think the democrat is too far to the left. Maybe engaging with young voters in this way can help him get over that obstacle.

    • @grue
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      1 year ago

      Just use 2000 hours. It makes the math easier, plus anybody who doesn’t get (at least!) two weeks of vacation with their full-time job is a chump who needs to unionize anyway.

      • BarqsHasBite
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        21 year ago

        Vacation, stat holidays, sick days, we can keep adding it all. I’m going to stick to 2080.

        • @grue
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          41 year ago

          The nice thing about assuming 2000 hours is that you can easily convert between annual salary and hourly wage by multiplying or dividing by 2 and moving the decimal point (e.g. $20/hour = $40k/year). But hey, if you’d rather do the math to come up with $40K/year = $19.23/hour or $20/hour = $41,600/year, more power to you, I guess.

    • @Cannacheques
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      21 year ago

      Not hard to pull off if the economy gets better

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    I think the only solution to this problem is subsidies.

    Subsidies knowledge works well around the world.

    • @grissee
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      11 year ago

      or good ol social welfare

    • @aregularbeaneater
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      -81 year ago

      I think subsidies got us here in the first place. When the government pays for stuff it drives prices up.

      • @phx
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        41 year ago

        Yeah that works best when they’re combined with regulation of industry.

      • @Cannacheques
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        21 year ago

        Depends what you subsidize, if you subsidize the learning, the work, the tools, etc. You’ll also have a lot of young people already committed, having bought their own tools or paid for much of their education etc already, who will feel that they’ve lost their advantage in the job market due to the subsidy, and others who need it who may not qualify, who will be in a major pickle. At this stage at least, there’s no one size fits all policy

  • @mawkishdave
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    61 year ago

    Yes something needs to change and I feel you are seeing the real panic of the right as more and more younger people can now vote and are just pissed as everything they are doing.

    • @hydro033
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      51 year ago

      People have been saying this since the 60s. Lots of young people are still conservative and many areas are still solidly red. I don’t see a massive blue wave that garners a supermajority happening anytime soon.

      • @Kept7963
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        51 year ago

        Actually, it looks like this time it might be true.

        Source

        Next is speculation on my part, but I imagine people are turning conservative more based on their wealth than their age. We saw a correlation between age and conservative sentiment because people tended to gather wealth as they got older.

        But that link has been progressively eroded, so people are no longer switching. Essentially the conservatives are killing the golden goose in their incessant pursuit of consolidating wealth.

        • @hydro033
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          11 year ago

          Yes, I have seen that point and also a paper discussing it, but I am a bit skeptical. It could potentially just delayed… which transitions well into your speculative point:

          Next is speculation on my part, but I imagine people are turning conservative more based on their wealth than their age. We saw a correlation between age and conservative sentiment because people tended to gather wealth as they got older.

          That is a very good point because inequality is killing wealth accumulation. It’s a very good working hypothesis imo.

  • @samus12345
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    61 year ago

    “That is what we are going to change.”

    :(

    • @electriccars
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      31 year ago

      6 class days away from finishing my Associates Degree at community college. 😁

      Halfway to Bachelor’s.

      • @MiddleWeigh
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        21 year ago

        Congrats. That probably feels really good.

        I never liked school. Authority, busy work, rote memorization. I always liked to learn ground up, with a purpose. And choosing what I wanted to be before i was even aware of myself felt limiting.

        Perhaps I’ll go someday, I could never afford to not work, but today, I think I’d be pretty decent at school…go figure.

        tbh, I wouldn’t trade my “education” for the world. If I could do it again, I’d do the same, i think.

        • @electriccars
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          41 year ago

          I only started going when I was 28. I’m also a very independent learner, I was unschooled as a child, but I love it.

          I’m the top student in most of my classes and I have straight As. It’s nice to prove to myself I’m able to succeed in school when I didn’t go when I was younger. You should give it a try, you might be surprised how much you actually enjoy it! I know I was.

          • @MiddleWeigh
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            31 year ago

            Perhaps I will get around to it. I do think I’d enjoy it, but for something I’d want to learn, not for a job. Tbh, the schedule would be what got me. I don’t like em. I like flapping on the wind lol. I definitely understand your sense of pride in your accomplishment, you deserve it. (:

  • @HiddenTower
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    51 year ago

    That is what we are going to change

    Then do it! I feel like I’ve heard this for so long, from all the parties, and just nothing gets done.

    • @cjsolx
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      261 year ago

      Do you realize who tweeted that? Because I feel like asking Bernie Sanders to just “do it” is very unfair. He’s been fucking trying for the past decade.

      • @HiddenTower
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        -11 year ago

        I’ll agree he is trying, but it’s so little, so slow, the whole legislature sucks at making progress.

        • @cjsolx
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          201 year ago

          Yeah, but again that’s not on Bernie. If we had more Bernies things would be different, but he’s literally trying to roll that rock up the mountain like goddamn Sisyphus by himself.

          Idk. I just feel like your comment is ungrateful for his efforts. He’s an old man who deserves a rest from all this futility, but I get the feeling that he won’t stop trying to effect change until he dies or is too physically/mentally infirm to continue.

      • @werds
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        -51 year ago

        I used to like Bernie , I think he talks a good game to get people in but can be counted on to take a dive.

        • @TrinityTek
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          41 year ago

          Take a dive, as in concede after losing the primary and supporting the Democratic nominee? That’s exactly what he said he would do all along. It’s a requirement to run as a Democrat in the primary and Bernie is a man of his word.