Saturday, December 24, 2022

@22:51, 12/12/22

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1

Ian Welsh13 hours ago
Long Covid Has Now Disabled Close to 2% Of The US Workforce
[image: Long Covid Has Now Disabled Close to 2% Of The US Workforce] An estimate, but… 2 million to 4 million full-time workers are out of the labor force due to long Covid. (To be counted in the labor force, an individual must have a job or be actively looking for work.) The midpoint of her estimate — 3 million workers — accounts for 1.8% of the entire U.S. civilian labor force. The figure may “sound unbelievably high” but is consistent with the impact in other major economies like the United Kingdom, Bach wrote in an August report. The figures are also likely conservative, since... read more
 
I need some proof.
I don't see any.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_COVID
A single definition is a place to start.
 
2
Ian Welsh2 days ago
2022 Fundraiser
[image: 2022 Fundraiser] It’s been a tough year for the world and a tough year at Chez Ian (cancer, housing issues, blah.) Personally, I’m just beginning to recover from cancer treatment, though some of it will be ongoing, and sucking, for another six to twelve months. China, deciding to the right thing (Zero Covid) stupid, is now releasing some restrictions and that’s going to go badly. Russia invaded Ukraine, ground forward and will likely wind up with less than it’d like and more than the West wanted. Europe has been the big loser in the Ukraine war, which many of us predicted, ... read more
 
Ian Welsh is the center of his world.
 
3
Ian Welsh3 days ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 11, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 11, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 11, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *“The People Cheering For Humanity’s End”* [The Atlantic, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 12-8-2022] “From Silicon Valley boardrooms to rural communes to academic philosophy departments, a seemingly inconceivable idea is being seriously discussed: that the end of humanity’s reign on Earth is imminent, and that we should welcome it. The revolt against humanity is still new enough to appear outlandish, but it has already spread beyond the fringes ... read more
 
Capitalism is ugly to those who are not capitalists.
 
4
Ian Welsh4 days ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to this week’s posts. read more
 
Merry Christmass
 
Sooner is better.   As soon as you can is best.
 
5
Ian Welsh5 days ago
Understanding Absolute Vs. Comparative Advantage
[image: Understanding Absolute Vs. Comparative Advantage] There are two types of advantages. A comparative advantage is when you have or can produce more of something than someone else. (Person, country, whatever.) An absolute advantage is when you have or can do or produce something others can’t. This can be threshold matter: in World War II the Allies had more than enough oil and the Axis didn’t have enough to run their war machine. While in numbers terms it looked like a comparative advantage, it was actually an absolute advantage: it strangled Axis production and their ability... read more
 
It is ultimately a matter of law.
 
6
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Podcast Interview On US Politics and the Midterms
[image: Podcast Interview On US Politics and the Midterms] I sat down with Chris Oestereich for a fairly long interview. He’s split it into three parts and the first is primarily about American politics. You can listen here. *DONATE OR SUBSCRIBE* read more
 
Not in public.  
.The Republican party is insane.

7
Ian Welsh1 week ago
The Decline Of the European Gardner
[image: The Decline Of the European Gardner] A while back EU foreign-policy chief Josep Borrell said “Europe is a garden.” He was fairly widely attacked, but I agree. Some parts are much less of a garden, but Europe is a garden. However, Europe’s status as a garden is based on factors which are no longer true: 1) Vast military superiority. 2) Vast productive superiority 3) Vast technological superiority at producing and fighting. This needs some unpacking. Prosperity is just how much goods and services you have. If a society has relatively low inequality, and enough goods and se... read more
 
It is just frosty weather in the European Garden.
To continue the metaphore the weeding season will come again.
 
8
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 4, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 4, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – December 4, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Professional Management Class war on workers* *Railroading workers* [Popular Information, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 11-29-2022] “The dispute boils down to one issue: paid sick leave. … Railroad companies have adamantly refused to include any short-term paid leave. That means rail workers must report to work, even when they are sick, or forfeit their pay. “It’s an insane and cruel system, and these guys are fed up with it,” Peter Kennedy, c... read more
 
Old news.
The strike was arbitrated.  
The Tories will not kill the National Health System.
It will not kill the Tories to pay the nurses.

9
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. read more
 
 Sooner is better.   As soon as you can is best.

10
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Is It Dangerous To Hit Targets Inside Russia?
[image: Is It Dangerous To Hit Targets Inside Russia?] Now, to be clear, a few targets have been hit in fairly minor ways, but let’s assume a real strike with Western provided weapons. The opinion below has been stated often. Latvian FM: NATO ‘Should Not Fear’ Moscow’s Response to Strikes Inside Russia by Kyle Anzalone@KyleAnzalone_ https://t.co/IHRPgrH6lh pic.twitter.com/0llLUUkggI — Antiwar.com (@Antiwarcom) December 1, 2022 So, thought exercise. During the Iraq war another country gives Iraq missiles capable of striking within the continental USA and Iraq launches them and doe... read more
 
The U.S. response was to stomp Iraq flat and to follow up with a futile religeous war in Afghanistan. 

11
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
US House Passes Bill Forcing Railway Workers To Not Strike
[image: US House Passes Bill Forcing Railway Workers To Not Strike] The bill makes them take a deal they had rejected before. Of particular note is that the bill gives them one sick day a year. Democrats voting against were: Chu-CA, DeSaulnier-CA, Golden-ME, Norcross-NJ, Peltola-AK, Pocan-WI, Tlaib-MI & Torres-CA. I note that AOC did not vote against. I was initially hopeful, but I think it’s now undeniable that she’s performatively left-wing only, she cannot be counted on. The House then passed a separate bill which would give the railway workers 7 sick days and defenders of Dem... read more
 
There will be no new civil war yet.
 
12
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
China’s Zero-Covid Is The Right Policy Done Stupid (or How China/The West Could Kill Covid)
[image: China’s Zero-Covid Is The Right Policy Done Stupid (or How China/The West Could Kill Covid)] Imagine policy on two axis. Good vs. Bad policy, and done well vs. done badly. Invading Iraq was bad policy, and it was done badly beyond the initial conquest. Quantitative easing was bad policy (unless you were very rich, it was good for the rich and bad for everyone else) and it was done well: it saved the rich then made them much richer. (They aren’t concerned about long term downsides.) Social Security or Medicare or Canada’s Universal Health care system (when first created a... read more
 
Quaranteen did not work against the black death.
It will not work against Covid-19.
 
13
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
The Decline & Fall Of The Soviet Union
[image: The Decline & Fall Of The Soviet Union] Our society seems fascinated by the fall of empires and nations. You rarely see a book on the “birth” of Rome, say, it’s the collapse we care about. In this I’m a bit odd, I prefer the creation period, the early years when everything goes right, to the fall, but it’s important to see that death precedes birth. The Czars fall, the Soviets rise… The Soviets fall, and after some birth pangs, Russia rises. But when considering the fall, one should also remember the rise. We act as if the late period, which is almost inevitably full of cor... read more
 
Pragmatism is the only way that works so far.
 
14
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 27, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 27, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 27, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Strategic Political Economy* *8 billion and counting* [ABC, via The Big Picture 11-22-2022] This week, the world’s population ticks over a historic milestone. But in the next century, society will be reshaped dramatically — and soon we’ll hit a decline we’ll never reverse *The incredible shrinking future of college* [Vox, via The Big Picture 11-23-2022] The population of college-age Americans is about to crash. It will change higher educati... read more
 
Demography is real.
 
15
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.   As soon as you canis best.
 
16
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Happy Thanksgiving
[image: Happy Thanksgiving] To American friends. I hope you have a good one. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
It can always be better.   I will try again.
 
17
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Why Twitter Has Been Marvelous
[image: Why Twitter Has Been Marvelous] I try not to write about topics where a lot of other people have said what I’d say, or, indeed, written better than I would. The takeover by Musk of Twitter is one of those topics. There have been plenty of excellent articles on what it means and on how Musk could really screw up Twitter by destroying the feeling of safety which advertisers require and by misunderstanding that the users are the product, not the customers. I’ve been on Twitter since August of 2008 (@iwelsh). I visit almost every day and for many years I spent a lot of time the... read more
 
Twitter has been agressively social.  The agression must stop.
 
18
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Politics Series: Foreign Affairs
[image: Politics Series: Foreign Affairs] (Previous: Government) (Introduction and Table of Contents) Clausewitz wrote “war is a continuation of policy by other means.” Foreign affairs are government by other means. They are attempts to control what people do in other countries: what their policies are, how they govern themselves, and often enough, who is in charge. In foreign affairs, the government trying to control the actions of another government doesn’t have full direct control, though it can have some control. Take “free trade” and International Monetary Fund (IMF) “struc... read more
 
"Form a commitee and see what can be done by talking"
 
19
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 20, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 20, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 20, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Here’s WHY your inbox is a dumpster fire of fundraising spam, and what we can do about it.* Will Easton, November 18, 2022 [DailyKos] Over the past couple cycles here, certain Democratic consulting firms, candidates & organizations have simply decided that it’s in their best interests to sell, rent, swap & trade your email address around the ecosystem, without bothering to ask you first. So if you’ve contributed to one campaign … you’re going t... read more
 
Things change.
 
20
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.    As soon as you can is best.
 
Merry Christmass.
 
 
 
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Monday, December 5, 2022

@11:30, 11/13/22

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1

an Welsh1 day ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.    As soon as you can is best.
 
2

Ian Welsh3 days ago
Losing the Power Of The Printing Press
[image: Losing the Power Of The Printing Press] If you look up whether governments can “just print more money” what you’ll find at most sites is an answer “no, because it only increases the amount of money, not the amount of economic activity.” This is not true and it’s not true in a number of ways. If there is under-utilization of capacity, you can print. Here’s US capacity: The US has been running substantially under capacity for a long time. But, you say, there was a lot of money printing (private and public, most money is created by banks, brokerages and so on) and capacity ut... read more
 
"Money is a social creation. So is how we run the economy. It can be made to work for everyone, for a few people, or to be a machine of impoverishment. The choice, on aggregate, is ours."
 
3
Ian Welsh6 days ago
The Great Favor The West Is Doing China By Banning Equipment Needed To Make Chips
[image: The Great Favor The West Is Doing China By Banning Equipment Needed To Make Chips] We really are run by fools. “If you shut out [China] with export control, [they’ll] strive toward tech sovereignty… [Then] they’ll be able to do it all by themselves and the market [for European suppliers] will be gone.” The great problem in the neo-liberal era is that the usual road for tech and industrial catch-up, protectionist tariffs is mostly closed. (This is who Britain and the US and almost everyone created their industrial base and caught up in tech.) Despite what a lot of people s... read more
 
Forcing China to learn is unproductive.

4
Ian Welsh6 days ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 6, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 6, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 6, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *The Pandemic* *The Worst Pediatric-Care Crisis in Decades * [The Atlantic, via Naked Capitalism 11-2-2022] [Twitter, via Naked Capitalism 11-2-2022] Could SARS2—which attacks all your blood vessels—account for this apparent 535% rise in heart attacks one year later in the greater Mumbai area? Nah…probably “Overambition” [image: 🤡] pic.twitter.com/vDajfIAECs — Radical Centrist, wrathful tantric deity [image: 🇺🇦] (@RadCentrism) October 17, 2022 ... read more
 
The week was without shocks.from this view.
Congress remains frozen.
 
5
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.   As soon as you can is best.
 
6
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Growth Through Real Estate Bubbles v.s. Sustainable High Income Growth (China)
[image: Growth Through Real Estate Bubbles v.s. Sustainable High Income Growth (China)] All right. Let’s talk some basic development stuff, primarily in the neoliberal era. Because industrial policy was disallowed with a few marginal exceptions due to the “rule based order” enforced by a variety of trade agreements and organizations, the traditional route of protecting domestic industries and growing behind tariffs became very difficult to do. Various countries used different dodges. Russia, to get out of the Yeltsin era collapse, went whole hog into resources: advanced nations ha... read more
 
The path to "the right thing" is important to me. 
The west should not worry.

https://zeihan.com/a-peek-behind-the-curtain-life-expectancy/
https://zeihan.com/the-beginning-of-the-fall-of-crimea/ 
https://zeihan.com/iranian-drones-and-russian-desperation/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0CQsifJrMc 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYZGlmX6HXY
Peter Zeihan is interesting but error ridden.

7
Ian Welsh1 week ago
None Of This Had To Be: The Two Paths
[image: None Of This Had To Be: The Two Paths] There are broadly two views of the situation we human are in. The first is that what is happening is just a result of human nature. It is who we are. We are stupid, short sighted, and profoundly cruel to each other and to other living beings. Our history is of war and rape and torture. In Tudor times they would cut open a person’s belly, and burn their intestines while they were still alive. Crowds would gather, and turn the occasion into a celebration. Environmental destruction is old, too. Mesopotamia was not a desert once, but we m... read more
 
Neither of these paths is stable.
Some middle path will be best.
Local bargaining must continue as circumstances change.
The economic system must be locally pragmatic.
 
8
Ian Welsh1 week ago
It’s The First World That Is Isolated
[image: It’s The First World That Is Isolated] I’ve said this for a while, but now we have empirical proof that most of the world likes Russia and China more than the US (h/t Johnstone): “Among the 1.2bn people who inhabit the world’s liberal democracies, three-quarters (75%) now hold a negative view of China, and 87% a negative view of Russia,” the report reads. “However, for the 6.3bn people who live in the rest of the world, the picture is reversed. In these societies, 70% feel positively towards China, and 66% positively towards Russia.” However, across a vast span of countries... read more
 
Whole nations of the unhoused.
The former colonial powers are resented.   
 
9
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 30, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 30, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 30, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Mike Davis, California’s ‘prophet of doom’, on activism in a dying world: ‘Despair is useless’ * [Guardian, via Naked Capitalism 10-27-2022] *You’ve been organizing for social change your whole life. How do you deal with a future that feels so bleak?* For someone my age who was in the civil rights movement, and in other struggles of the 1960s, I’ve seen miracles happen. I’ve seen ordinary people do the most heroic things. When you’ve had the privi... read more
 
Russia is a police state again.
https://zeihan.com/energy-at-the-end-of-the-world/
https://zeihan.com/ukrainian-consequences-nord-stream%ef%bf%bc/
https://zeihan.com/ukrainian-consequences-energy-in-europe%ef%bf%bc/ 

10
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.     As soon as you can is best.
 
11
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Climate Gas Increases Accelerating
[image: Climate Gas Increases Accelerating] Who would have expected? All three are accelerating, with Methane the worst. Now my first reaction was that this was a reaction to Covid restrictions ending, but if you look at the chart it’s clear that isn’t the case, as the amount of increase is more than Pre-Covid. Related: “Just 26 of 193 countries that agreed last year to step up their climate actions have followed through with more ambitious plans.” https://t.co/a8LXccRyoI — David Wallace-Wells (@dwallacewells) October 26, 2022 This is why I laughed when people heralded Kyoto or P... read more
 
Yes. 
The use of fossil carbon must end.

12
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
The Inflationary Consequences of Friendzoning and Decoupling
[image: The Inflationary Consequences of Friendzoning and Decoupling] During the rise of China and the “One World/Free Trade” period, one good thing which can be said for offshoring is that it helped reduce inflation. It, indeed, drove much of the inflation reduction, with most of the rest of the inflation reduction being concerted efforts to keep wages low, with a strong assist from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to use methods like hedonics to pretend that inflation was lower than it actually was. The new mantra is “friendzoning” — not so much bringing industry back to the US but... read more
 
China is a "paper tiger".
 
13
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 23, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 23, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 23, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *What is happening in the West Bank right now: a full breakdown * [Mondoweiss, via Naked Capitalism 10-19-2022] The past few weeks have witnessed a noticeable intensification of Israel’s crackdown on Palestinians in the West Bank, targeting both ordinary civilians in their homes and villages, and armed resistance fighters and groups. Simultaneously, armed settlers have been terrorizing Palestinian communities across the West Bank, often in the pres... read more
 
Neither side will surrender. 
The fighting will continue.
 
14
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.   As soon as you can is best.
 
15
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
The Adderall Shortage Is Just the First Major Shortage
[image: The Adderall Shortage Is Just the First Major Shortage] People who have read me for a while know that for years I’ve been warning of prescription drug shortages or even stoppages. Well, now we have one that’s large enough to have made headlines: A national shortage of Adderall has left patients who rely on the pills for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder scrambling to find alternative treatments and uncertain whether they will be able to refill their medication. The Food and Drug Administration announced the shortage last week, saying that one of the largest producer... read more
 
The medical and medicinal establishment is capitalist.
 
16
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Avoiding Added Emotional Suffering (Buddha’s Second Arrow)
[image: Avoiding Added Emotional Suffering (Buddha’s Second Arrow)] When I say in this post to imagine something stop and imagine it, or you won’t get the necessary effect. First, imagine falling. You catch yourself on your hands, you’re not seriously injured, but your hands are abraded and you’ve wrenched a muscle in you back. Next. Imagine that you fell unavoidably: there was a small bit of ice, but you were walking carefully and there’s nothing you could have done. Third: imagine that you were careless. There was an obvious piece of ice, you weren’t paying attention, and you kn... read more
 
Good advice.
 
17
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Rooming House Policy Positions of Candidates For Toronto Riding University-Rosedale
[image: Rooming House Policy Positions of Candidates For Toronto Riding University-Rosedale] I live in University-Rosedale, in something which might be considered a rooming house, though my unit is self-contained (one room plus a small bathroom with a shower, the main room has a cooking area.) I’ve lived in rooming houses on and off throughout my life. I’m putting the candidates policies up mostly so it can be found by people in my riding, which means it’ll be of little interest to most of my readers. I promised no editorializing when soliciting these positions and I’m going to le... read more
 
Cheap squats are part of the housing mix.
 
18
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
How To Make Peace In Ukraine
[image: How To Make Peace In Ukraine] The Ukraine war is steadily escalating. Strikes on infrastructure, the Russian mobilization of reserves (Ukraine has already mobilized multiple times) and increase NATO aid as well as economies stuttering around the world. Tac-nukes have been put on the table, though not used. Peace is better than war, but there seems to be no route towards peace. The Ukrainians have passed a law stating they won’t negotiate while Putin is leader, both sides think they can win on the battlefield and so more refugees flood out of Ukraine, more people die, are ra... read more
 
Russia will be defeated economically again. 
 
19
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 16, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 16, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 16, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Strategic Political Economy* *“How We Create–Then Blame–A Viral Underclass” (interview)* Steven Thrasher [MedScape, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 10-14-2022] [*TW: Viruses, diseases, public health — are all reality based and have no respect for the ideologies of neoliberals, conservatives, or libertarians.*] …viruses give us this map of understanding that there is no distinct me and distinct you. There’s always this organic material that potential... read more
 
China and Russia will have a hard winter.
 
20
Ian Welsh4 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts (no Covid or Ukraine.) Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.    As soon as you can is best.
 
 
 
 ||

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

21:40, 10/30/22

|

 

1

Ian Welsh1 day ago
Climate Gas Increases Accelerating
[image: Climate Gas Increases Accelerating] Who would have expected? All three are accelerating, with Methane the worst. Now my first reaction was that this was a reaction to Covid restrictions ending, but if you look at the chart it’s clear that isn’t the case, as the amount of increase is more than Pre-Covid. Related: “Just 26 of 193 countries that agreed last year to step up their climate actions have followed through with more ambitious plans.” https://t.co/a8LXccRyoI — David Wallace-Wells (@dwallacewells) October 26, 2022 This is why I laughed when people heralded Kyoto or P... read more
 
Remember to vote.
Government will go electric when it can.
 
2
Ian Welsh3 days ago
The Inflationary Consequences of Friendzoning and Decoupling
[image: The Inflationary Consequences of Friendzoning and Decoupling] During the rise of China and the “One World/Free Trade” period, one good thing which can be said for offshoring is that it helped reduce inflation. It, indeed, drove much of the inflation reduction, with most of the rest of the inflation reduction being concerted efforts to keep wages low, with a strong assist from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to use methods like hedonics to pretend that inflation was lower than it actually was. The new mantra is “friendzoning” — not so much bringing industry back to the US but... read more
 
Taxing the rich will fix inflation.

3
Ian Welsh4 days ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 23, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 23, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 23, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *What is happening in the West Bank right now: a full breakdown * [Mondoweiss, via Naked Capitalism 10-19-2022] The past few weeks have witnessed a noticeable intensification of Israel’s crackdown on Palestinians in the West Bank, targeting both ordinary civilians in their homes and villages, and armed resistance fighters and groups. Simultaneously, armed settlers have been terrorizing Palestinian communities across the West Bank, often in the pres... read more
 
 
The Palestinians have not learned to live in peace.
Religious wars do not end.

4
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.  As soon as you can is best.
 
5
Ian Welsh1 week ago
The Adderall Shortage Is Just the First Major Shortage
[image: The Adderall Shortage Is Just the First Major Shortage] People who have read me for a while know that for years I’ve been warning of prescription drug shortages or even stoppages. Well, now we have one that’s large enough to have made headlines: A national shortage of Adderall has left patients who rely on the pills for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder scrambling to find alternative treatments and uncertain whether they will be able to refill their medication. The Food and Drug Administration announced the shortage last week, saying that one of the largest producer... read more
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adderall
Speed.
 
6
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Avoiding Added Emotional Suffering (Buddha’s Second Arrow)
[image: Avoiding Added Emotional Suffering (Buddha’s Second Arrow)] When I say in this post to imagine something stop and imagine it, or you won’t get the necessary effect. First, imagine falling. You catch yourself on your hands, you’re not seriously injured, but your hands are abraded and you’ve wrenched a muscle in you back. Next. Imagine that you fell unavoidably: there was a small bit of ice, but you were walking carefully and there’s nothing you could have done. Third: imagine that you were careless. There was an obvious piece of ice, you weren’t paying attention, and you kn... read more
 
Consider it done.
 
7
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Rooming House Policy Positions of Candidates For Toronto Riding University-Rosedale
[image: Rooming House Policy Positions of Candidates For Toronto Riding University-Rosedale] I live in University-Rosedale, in something which might be considered a rooming house, though my unit is self-contained (one room plus a small bathroom with a shower, the main room has a cooking area.) I’ve lived in rooming houses on and off throughout my life. I’m putting the candidates policies up mostly so it can be found by people in my riding, which means it’ll be of little interest to most of my readers. I promised no editorializing when soliciting these positions and I’m going to le... read more
 
There are no limits on the unhoused. 

8
Ian Welsh1 week ago
How To Make Peace In Ukraine
[image: How To Make Peace In Ukraine] The Ukraine war is steadily escalating. Strikes on infrastructure, the Russian mobilization of reserves (Ukraine has already mobilized multiple times) and increase NATO aid as well as economies stuttering around the world. Tac-nukes have been put on the table, though not used. Peace is better than war, but there seems to be no route towards peace. The Ukrainians have passed a law stating they won’t negotiate while Putin is leader, both sides think they can win on the battlefield and so more refugees flood out of Ukraine, more people die, are ra... read more
 
 This plan is a nonstarter.  
Russians keep bailing out of Russia.
They will not return.

9
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 16, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 16, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 16, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Strategic Political Economy* *“How We Create–Then Blame–A Viral Underclass” (interview)* Steven Thrasher [MedScape, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 10-14-2022] [*TW: Viruses, diseases, public health — are all reality based and have no respect for the ideologies of neoliberals, conservatives, or libertarians.*] …viruses give us this map of understanding that there is no distinct me and distinct you. There’s always this organic material that potential... read more
 
The other news.
 
10
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts (no Covid or Ukraine.) Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.    As soon as you can is best.
 
11
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Review of Wolfgang Streeck’s "How Will Capitalism End?”, by Marku52
[image: Review of Wolfgang Streeck’s] By Marku52 Streeck’s book “How will Capitalism End” is a collection of essays he wrote for the New Left Review almost a decade ago. It seems very prescient today. Much of his points are shared in the introduction, and first few chapters, and some of the points get repeated. Later chapters involve German politics, and are less useful to us. I find his idea that without corrective dialectics, capitalism will die of its own excesses, persuasive and I will go into more details in this review. “The fact that capitalism has, until now, managed to out... read more
 
The U.S. was and is pragmatic.
Attempts at purity are destructive.
 
Vote.
 
12
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Covid Variants Continue Immune, Vaccine and Treatment Resistance Evolution
[image: Covid Variants Continue Immune, Vaccine and Treatment Resistance Evolution] From Salon: BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 are both spreading extremely fast in parts of Europe. According to Cornelius Roemer, a viral evolution expert at the University of Basel, the number of BQ.1.1 infections has been doubling every week. That kind of exponential growth is sure to drive the variant to becoming dominant globally in short order. “The degree of immune escape and evasion is amazing right now, crazy,” Yunlong Richard Cao, an immunologist at Peking University in Beijing, told Nature this week. Cao... read more
 
Covid-19 is endemic world wide.
Keep up with the boosters.
 
13
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Ukraine Is The First Major War Of The "Age of War and Revolution”
[image: Ukraine Is The First Major War Of The] There are periods that tend relatively peaceful, and there are eras of war and revolution. Back in 2016 I added a new category, “The Age of War and Revolution”. It’s now 10 pages long. I added it because it was clear we were transitioning, and we’ve now hit a marker point: the first major war in the Age. It’s the first, but it won’t be the last. Sri Lanka was the first collapse of the Age (related “The Twilight of Neoliberalism“, a sub-category). There will be more of those. My money is currently on England (good chance it won’t be t... read more
 
War is in no one's interest.
 
Give some attention to Peter Zeihan.
https://zeihan.com/
 
14
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Russia Hits Power Infrastructure
[image: Russia Hits Power Infrastructure] Well. Maybe hitting the Crimean bridge was less smart than it seemed. Krivorozhskaya TPP (Krivoy Rog) – one of the largest and key power plants in Ukraine – was seriously damaged as a result of a missile attack. There are serious water and electricity shortages. — Dr.Snekotron (@snekotron) October 10, 2022 There are two possibilities here: *It’s a tit-for-tat. *“You hit our key infrastructure, we’ll hit yours and we can hit harder.” If so, it’s actually a warning from Russia to end the escalation here. *It’s “gloves off” time. *Russia has... read more
 
The axe has not fallen.
"London can take it"
 
15
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 9, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 9, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 9, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *The carnage of mainstream neoliberal economics* *The Expected Financial Crash Is Finally Here * [Moon of Alabama, via Naked Capitalism 10-4-2022] Today Yves Smith of *Naked Capitalism* writes about the now Inevitable Financial Crisis…. The second warning comes from ‘Dr. Doom’ Nouriel Roubini…. The central banks have misdiagnosed the reason for the currently high inflation rates. They were caused not only by too much stimulus provided by governments an... read more
 
 The economy is in trouble.

16
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. AKA: no Ukraine or Covid. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.   As soon as you can is best.
  
17
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Addendum To My Fifteen Points On The Ukraine War
[image: Addendum To My Fifteen Points On The Ukraine War] Decided a little more needed to be added to the post, but email went out just before I added it, so I’m putting it here. *Addendum:* My argument, from the beginning, has always been simple: Russia can mobilize more men than Ukraine and has reason to do so. Unless they are weaker internally/China than I think or NATO intervenes more than I think, they will eventually have a conventional military victory. Of course, I could be wrong, but nothing which has happened yet has changed my view. What has happened is that NATO was wi... read more
 
Ian Welsh is wrong.
 
18
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Fourteen Points About the Future of the Ukraine War
[image: Fourteen Points About the Future of the Ukraine War] Let’s lay it out. First: the next two to three months belong to Ukraine. They have the initiative and new Russian troops will take time to arrive. Second: Russia is almost certainly mobilizing more than 300K troops, the bill allowed for one million. The more they mobilize the more training time will be required; not just because there are more troops but because they are reaching deeper into reserves to people who have been out for longer. Third: When enough of those troops reach the front, Russia will stop their territo... read more
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
 
Russia is not as Welsh imagines.
 
19
Rationality Is A Process, Not A Conclusion (Nuclear Weapons Edition)
[image: Rationality Is A Process, Not A Conclusion (Nuclear Weapons Edition)] A lot of mistakes come from assuming rationality means “thinks the same way I do” rather than “reasons from premises I might not share.” Left than 1/1000 economists predicted the financial collapse, because they reasoned from assumptions like “the market is self-correcting” or “housing prices never go down.” (Sometimes both at the same time, which is rarely rational.) Back in 2008 I wrote an article saying the next war w/Russia would be over Sevastopol/Crimea. I was told by Eurocrats that was impossible,... read more
 
Victory  conditions for Ukraine elude me.

20
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Vaccine And Mask Effectiveness
[image: Vaccine And Mask Effectiveness] I have mostly avoided the vaccine debate, but let’s take a brief pass. This isn’t because vaccines don’t work. This doesn’t mean I’m entirely happy with MRNA vaccines, I’m not and I think there’s some validity to them having negative side-effects. I’m even more unhappy with the uneven way they were applied, which allowed for Covid to gain repeated mutations which made vaccines less effective. I personally would have taken Sputnik-V if it were allowed in my country. But the vaccines are protective against death and serious illness is indicate... read more

Nothing so far is totally effective.
We must live with Covid-19.



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Monday, October 24, 2022

@20:26, 10/9/22

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1

Ian Welsh1 day ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. AKA: no Ukraine or Covid. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.    As soon as you can is best.
 
2
Ian Welsh2 days ago
Addendum To My Fifteen Points On The Ukraine War
[image: Addendum To My Fifteen Points On The Ukraine War] Decided a little more needed to be added to the post, but email went out just before I added it, so I’m putting it here. *Addendum:* My argument, from the beginning, has always been simple: Russia can mobilize more men than Ukraine and has reason to do so. Unless they are weaker internally/China than I think or NATO intervenes more than I think, they will eventually have a conventional military victory. Of course, I could be wrong, but nothing which has happened yet has changed my view. What has happened is that NATO was wi... read more
 
Noise.
 
3
Ian Welsh2 days ago
Fourteen Points About the Future of the Ukraine War
[image: Fourteen Points About the Future of the Ukraine War] Let’s lay it out. First: the next two to three months belong to Ukraine. They have the initiative and new Russian troops will take time to arrive. Second: Russia is almost certainly mobilizing more than 300K troops, the bill allowed for one million. The more they mobilize the more training time will be required; not just because there are more troops but because they are reaching deeper into reserves to people who have been out for longer. Third: When enough of those troops reach the front, Russia will stop their territo... read more
 
Putin is wrong on Ukraine.
The energy infrastructure of the "West" will lose fossil carbon.
 
Ian Welsh4 days ago
Rationality Is A Process, Not A Conclusion (Nuclear Weapons Edition)
[image: Rationality Is A Process, Not A Conclusion (Nuclear Weapons Edition)] A lot of mistakes come from assuming rationality means “thinks the same way I do” rather than “reasons from premises I might not share.” Left than 1/1000 economists predicted the financial collapse, because they reasoned from assumptions like “the market is self-correcting” or “housing prices never go down.” (Sometimes both at the same time, which is rarely rational.) Back in 2008 I wrote an article saying the next war w/Russia would be over Sevastopol/Crimea. I was told by Eurocrats that was impossible,... read more
 
Rationality is defined by the thinker's axioms.
Russia  has not the axioms of NATO.

5
Ian Welsh5 days ago
Vaccine And Mask Effectiveness
[image: Vaccine And Mask Effectiveness] I have mostly avoided the vaccine debate, but let’s take a brief pass. This isn’t because vaccines don’t work. This doesn’t mean I’m entirely happy with MRNA vaccines, I’m not and I think there’s some validity to them having negative side-effects. I’m even more unhappy with the uneven way they were applied, which allowed for Covid to gain repeated mutations which made vaccines less effective. I personally would have taken Sputnik-V if it were allowed in my country. But the vaccines are protective against death and serious illness is indicate... read more
 
Zero Covid is not possible.
Strategies to reduce infection do work mostly.

6
Ian Welsh1 week ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 2, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 2, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – October 2, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Global power shift as USA and west commit suicide by neoliberalism* *The U.S. Is Winning Its War On Europe’s Industries And People * [Moon of Alabama, via Naked Capitalism 9-27-2022] *The epidemic* *“‘Other Places in the Country Didn’t Do This’: How One California Town Survived Covid Better Than the Rest”* [Politico, via Naked Capitalism Water Cooler 9-27-2022] t “Even with its world-class technologies, the university’s labs didn’t have equipment ... read more
 
Other news.
The Times should be accessible to you as it was.

7
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discussThe topics unrelated to recent posts. No Covid or Ukraine related discussion. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.   As soon as you can is best.
 
8
Ian Welsh1 week ago
America Defeats Germany Again
[image: America Defeats Germany Again] There’s a good article in Der Spiegel on the German energy/industrial crisis which is worth your time. Basically industries which have high energy costs are being crushed. In particular this means chemical and automotive, both big in Germany, but extends far further. (Indeed, the chemical industry was essentially invented by Germany in the 19th century, and American industry exists because the patents were broken in WWI and not reinstated after the war.) This has a lot of knock-on effects, not only in price increases (which are big), but sho... read more
 
International relations are difficult.
 
9
Ian Welsh1 week ago
The Attacks On Nord Stream I & II
[image: The Attacks On Nord Stream I & II] Let’s point out the obvious. Russia had no reason to attack its own pipelines. If it doesn’t want gas to go thru them it just turns off the tap. Sabotage to the pipelines weakens Russia’s position, since it will be months before they can offer to turn fuel back on, which they would have wanted to offer during the winter in order to pressure Germany in specific and Europe in general. Anyone who says or believes that Russia did this is either a moron, a propagandist or has had their mind so twisted by Russia-hatred they can no longer think s... read more
 
Possibly big oil.
 
10
Ian Welsh1 week ago
No The Solution To Ending Mandatory Masking Isn’t "Well YOU can still mask”
[image: No The Solution To Ending Mandatory Masking Isn’t] Few things make more more tired or contemptuous of someone than, when a masking mandate is removed, someone saying “well, you still have the choice to wear a mask, we’re not effecting you” or some variation. Masking is not primarily about protecting yourself. Only a respirator and a well-fitted N95 offer good protection from Covid if other people aren’t masking. Now that chart may be making you feel safe if you go quickly in and out of businesses, but realize that there are multiple people in those buildings and that in... read more
 
Reduced contagion is not zero.

11
Ian Welsh1 week ago
How Peace In Ukraine Has Been Made Almost Impossible
[image: How Peace In Ukraine Has Been Made Almost Impossible] To make peace either one side has to be unable to fight any more, or both sides must want to make peace. One problem in Ukraine is that both sides (and I don’t mean Ukraine and Russia, but Ukraine/NATO v. Russia) have put themselves into a trap where the leaders of various countries can’t afford to lose the war, because they will lose power. Support for Ukraine is popular in Europe, but it is also true that such support has cost the Europeans a great deal, and that ordinary Europeans have seen bad economic times as a re... read more
 
Only the headline matters.
 
12
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – September 25, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – September 25, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – September 25, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *The Making Of “LINCOLN” Behind The Scenes* [TW: A enthralling discussion of how they strove to make the film as authentic as possible. The clock ticking heard in the background of some scenes, for example, was a recording made of a watch Lincoln had actually owned. And Daniel Day Lewis describing how he researched and came to love Lincoln as a person is simply marvelous.] *Light Under a Bushel: Eric Foner, interviewed by Nawal Arjini* [The New... read more
 
More domestic news.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0CQsifJrMc
 
13
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent posts. (No Ukraine, in other words.) Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.  As soon as you can is best.
 
14
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Effects of the 300K Russian Mobilization
[image: Effects of the 300K Russian Mobilization] Putin has called up 300K Russian reservists. These are people who had military service, but unlike the National Guard in the US or other similar reserve forces they do not attend regular training. I’m seeing both reports of Russian men fleeing the country and of volunteers not in the call-up reporting. Bear in mind that Russia has somewhat more than 2 million reservists, this is a little over one-seventh of the men they can call up. The quality of these forces will be low, but they aren’t raw recruits. Russia’s primary liability i... read more
 
Russia is slow off their mark.
Their lines are thinly held.
 
15
Ian Welsh2 weeks ago
Machiavelli On Putin
[image: Machiavelli On Putin] Back in 2014 I wrote an article which started from the problems that Russia was happening at the Sochi Winter Olympics. It wasn’t running smoothly, and that was interesting and a warning of the limits of what Putin had done in Russia. The Beijing Olympics ran almost like clockwork, the 1980 Moscow Olympics worked relatively well, but not Sochi. Russia’s got problem, big ones, and Sochi has highlighted them. Putin has failed to transition the economy from resources, and he has not kept corruption under limits: corruption is one thing, that the system ca... read more
 
Putin has not governed the middle population. 

16
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – September 18, 2022
[image: Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – September 18, 2022] Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – September 18, 2022 by Tony Wikrent *Economics as cultural warfare* *Our Ancestors Thought We’d Build an Economic Paradise. Instead We Got 2022 * Brad DeLong [Time, via Naked Capitalism 9-11-2022] Adapted from DeLong’s new book, Slouching Towards Utopia: An Economic History of the Twentieth Century, published by Basic Books…. …the first half of the Big Story of twentieth-century economic history is a triumphant one. Friedrich von Hayek was a genius. He saw clearly that the market e... read more
 
The left and the right object to the center.
 
17
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Open Thread
[image: Open Thread] Use to discuss topics unrelated to recent comments. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn read more
 
Sooner is better.  As soon as you can is best.
 
18
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Understanding and Surviving the Post-Prosperity Era
[image: Understanding and Surviving the Post-Prosperity Era] I don’t usually write about my personal life much, but today will be an exception. The other day I had to go the hospital, to a cancer clinic (nothing to sweat, I have the type of cancer with a 98% survival rate) and the clinic I was at had only one doctor. It normally has three or four. I asked the nurse, and she told me that the others were out with Covid. Emergency departments across Canada are having shut-downs because they don’t have enough nurses. Covid, either temporary, or nurses having quit because they can’t ta... read more
 
If developments follow this path billions will die.
 
19
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Lazy V.S. Uninterested & Quiet Quitting
[image: Lazy V.S. Uninterested & Quiet Quitting] Being lazy and being uninterested are two different things. When I was a kid I was usually reluctant to do most farm work, because it was boring, but would go for 10 miles runs or long runs, or read multiple books in a day (which many people who love farm work would hate doing.) Most of what passes for lazy is uninterested in drag. The old maxim: “work is what you wouldn’t do for free” is part of it, but there are four types of activities on this spectrum. 1. “I enjoy doing it for itself and would do it even if I wasn’t getting ... read more
 
"Incentives work, but they work best at getting people to do things which shouldn’t be done in the first place."
 
20
Ian Welsh3 weeks ago
Solutions: Cash and Cashlessness
[image: Solutions: Cash and Cashlessness] Recently I saw the observation that you can track gentrification by the spread of shops that won’t take cash. This is a problem because a lot of people don’t have credit or debit cards, even still. It’s easy to wind up “unbanked”. It’s also the case that cashless societies have walked a fair way down the authoritarian path. The solution is simple enough: 1. make it illegal for retail stores to refuse cash. 2. Create a national “cash card”, similar to gift cards, and mandate that it must be accepted by any retailer, offline or onli... read more
 
Cashless stores are just a nuisance.  
They will not survive in a broken society.
There must be functioning banks,
 
 
Use the Times.
The access works again.
 
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