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12:49 AM
@CowperKettle Laughs with everyone else
Nervous why-was-that-funny look
 
 
1 hour later…
2:10 AM
@M.A.R. stifles a smirk
 
 
6 hours later…
 
5 hours later…
1:41 PM
@Færd Do you think this translates well to other cultures? mutatis mutandis, ceteris paribus and all that, whatever is paribussed
 
amo amar amat
 
(The top 7 are at the top but outside the screen area. Those are mainly the poorest countries in Latin America plus Brazil, Syria, and the Philippines.)
(I think many countries aren't in this list anyway.)
So 4 people were killed in the Netherlands by the police in 2017. Each death is of course terrible, but it's just not a big issue in Europe.
 
2:08 PM
@Cerberus A thousand a year here, more or less and probably more, for the past fifteen years running, at least.
 
I see it.
 
Avoid suntans; they can be deadly if you're mistaken for a Mexican.
 
I do.
Factor 30.
And I normally don't sit in the sun anyway.
 
you're getting more deadly as the years pass
 
@Mitch Creating alternatives to policing? I think that should be the immediate and ultimate goal in most places.
Some of the propositions may be harder to implement for poorer countries, tho.
This doesn't excuse Iran's high rate at all, btw.
 
2:18 PM
 
@Cerberus I see that more as a correlation than a causation.
 
The police in England and Wales only fired their guns 7 times in one year. I wonder if that includes firing at something other than people.
But they are not normally armed with guns. That helps a lot.
@Færd Why?
 
Because you wouldn't purchase and carry a gun if you weren't scared.
 
It kind of makes sense: if people carry guns, the police are scared more easily, so they might fire sooner. In addition, they fire to kill, because a down man can still shoot back at the police.
 
@Cerberus certainly makes me feel safer.
 
2:21 PM
Thirdly, the culture of violence in America, might 'normalise' shooting for policemen, too.
 
The freedom to have guns exists in some other countries, as opposed to the fear that drives people to arm themselves.
 
The centre of Thessaloniki is a bit scary as a Brit, when I see an armed cop
actually, same in London
 
@MattE.Эллен I can imagine.
I suppose I am used to armed policemen. But anything other than a small pistol, in public, does scare me.
@Færd Gun ownership is much higher in America than in any European country, though.
 
@Cerberus Those are real factors. But it doesn't explain the discrepancy between the ratio of, say, Canada's ownership rate to its fatal shootings, to that of the US.
 
And I think it is much harder to buy a gun in those Western countries where you are allowed to own one at all.
 
2:23 PM
@Cerberus There is a reason for that.
Or reasons. Which are not explained in that pictures.
 
@Færd Oh, of course it isn't simple correlation, between number of deaths per 100,000 inhabitants and number of guns per same.
 
it's because American's are scared of the British coming back to reclaim what's theirs
 
@Færd It is related to what I called a culture of violence above.
@MattE.Эллен Yeah, if Britain had managed to control America until 1900, it would have been a second Canada.
 
But with more people.
 
2:25 PM
that's a funny thought
Canada II
 
In America, the military and the police are one and the same. The same troops who police the planet, go back home to police the civilians. They use shared equipment and arms.
 
Their independence was ultimately a tragedy.
 
@Cerberus Right.
 
@Færd The equipment I know about. But the same people?
I don't think their army regularly patrols the streets?
 
but if you leave the forces, it's easy to become a cop
 
2:26 PM
@Cerberus Not all of them, but some soldiers do join the police.
 
@MattE.Эллен Ah, OK, if that's what he meant.
@Færd So you meant after leaving the army, OK.
That's an interesting issue.
 
@MattE.Эллен Right. I think it happens at a specially high rate in the US.
Lemme see...
 
> We need to reimagine public safety in ways that shrink and eventually abolish police and prisons while prioritizing education, housing, economic security, mental health and alternatives to conflict and violence.
This would seem rather odd.
Of course the police are much too often present at all America, as the article says. And investing in non-violent ways to reduce crime and social issues would be a good idea.
And they imprison and kill far too many people. And their prisons are inhumane.
But abolish police and prisons altogether?
At any rate, this article does not apply to (most) other Western countries.
It is an American problem.
 
@Cerberus Especially so, but not exclusively.
This abolishment, to me, means radically changing those institutions. It requires fundamental changes to how we define, shape, organize, and protect our societies around the world too.
So it's not immediately achievable.
But it is possible.
In Iran, too, the army operating outside and the police quelling uprisings inside are closely linked. I can imagine a much more peaceful and less policed Iran only if we are at peace with our neighbors and with the world.
For now, it seems that we are going to reap what we and others have sewn for a long time. Which makes the above vision all the more necessary.
.
> Today just 6 percent of the population at large has served in the military, but 19 percent of police officers are veterans, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data...
I wonder how that compares to other countries.
 
2:49 PM
@Færd I suspect will be different here. They are generally viewed as two very different career paths. There is little overlap between the jobs (except perhaps for those stationed for a long time in Afghanistan...).
But I have no numbers.
@Færd Not exclusively, but it is a problem that need not exist in rich countries.
@Færd That sounds like an excellent idea.
But "we": prisons in e.g. Holland or Scandinavia are already quite humane, and focused on reintegrating people into society once they are set free. Of course things could be improved.
I'm sure the same applies to e.g. England, Germany, New Zealand to some degree.
At least police violence really isn't a big issue.
 
Okay then. Good for you. :)
 
There will always be incidents, and things can certainly be improved. But I don't see a possible fundamental change.
More emphasis on prevention, emancipation, those things are always a good idea.
 
I would need to know more to comment on possible improvements.
 
Fewer military conflicts might very well help to make countries more peaceful internally as well, as you say.
 
Right. You've had the benefit of peaceful relations with each other for a long time.
You're not a United States of Europe, alas. But still.
And yet you're a fracture of the world's population. I guess that could justify the 'we' some.
 
3:00 PM
@Færd I'm not sure we'd want that!
What do you mean by fracture?
 
10%?
It's weird that you have a somewhat unified economy without uniting in government. Looks like you've put the cart before the horse.
 
do you mean fraction?
 
I'm no economist tho. But I don't think Europeans can have democratic control over Europe's economy like this.
@MattE.Эллен Yes, my bad.
 
You're speaking in abstractions that I'm not sure how to respond to.
A unified economy: I don't know about that.
Democratic control over the economy: yes, to a considerable degree, but not over e.g. the currency or the central bank, except with great difficulty.
But what is your message here?
 
3:09 PM
Europe's united in government insofar as there's freedom of movement, cooperation between police forces, laws that are manufactured centrally and applied to each nation. It's not like the USA, where the federal government has more control over the individual states, and states can't secede (AFAIK), so I think Europe's got a good balance, apart from all the capitalism
 
Okay, so let me try to be more specific: can you make long-term investments in more troubled parts of Europe (say, Greece) to help them bounce back, or is it only the central bank issuing more and more loans to that part while encouraging that local government to impose austerity measures on their people so they can pay back the loan?
 
@MattE.Эллен Agreed.
@Færd Who are "you", and what do you mean by "can make investments"?
Anyone can make long-term investments in Greece.
China has bought parts of the main port of Athens, I believe.
 
You = Europe
 
So that is what I am, OK.
But can you be more specific, or give an example?
I really don't know what you mean.
 
@Cerberus Put local workers to work with decent pay with a vision of long-term prosperity (advancing infrastructure, etc)
 
3:19 PM
Anyone can do that?
Are you asking whether Greece is generally a safe place to invest in?
Generally, yes.
 
But a federal government can do it in a more concerted and organized way.
A central bank can only loan money.
 
I'm still confused.
 
And pressure the local government to imose austerity so they pay back sooner.
 
Investment is not typically something I associate with governments.
 
Okay right I don't mean that kind of investment.
 
3:22 PM
The European government sends lots of money to Greece every year.
No loans.
 
I used it metaphorically.
@Cerberus Hmm.
I don't know much about Europe, you know.
 
This is money which is transferred directly.
 
The Greek government-debt crisis was the sovereign debt crisis faced by Greece in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2007–08. Widely known in the country as The Crisis (Greek: Η Κρίση), it reached the populace as a series of sudden reforms and austerity measures that led to impoverishment and loss of income and property, as well as a small-scale humanitarian crisis. In all, the Greek economy suffered the longest recession of any advanced capitalist economy to date, overtaking the US Great Depression. As a result, the Greek political system has been upended, social exclusion increased, and...
 
So the net contributors together pay about 3.3 billion to Greece each year, via the EU government institutions.
 
> On 2 May, the European Commission, European Central Bank (ECB) and International Monetary Fund (IMF) (the Troika) launched a €110 billion bailout loan to rescue Greece from sovereign default and cover its financial needs through June 2013, conditional on implementation of austerity measures, structural reforms and privatization of government assets.[85] The bailout loans were mainly used to pay for the maturing bonds, but also to finance the continued yearly budget deficits.
That's 2010, I guess.
 
3:25 PM
Yes, that happens as well.
But the contributions from the chart above are not loans.
 
Okay.
Don't you think an overarching federal government would have been able to address that problem without pushing Greece into austerity and privatization?
And debt?
 
Able? The EU was able to do so, but it didn't wish to.
Just as e.g. the American government forces austerity on bankrupt places like Detroit.
 
Hmm. Maybe.
 
But, because some functions in America are carried out by the federal government which are, in Europe, carried out by member states, there is less of a safety net in Europe.
 
Isn't it the case that the people of Detroit potentially could have more say in the federal government than the people of Greece in the EU?
 
3:29 PM
I don't think so? Why?
 
Like, is there a power imbalance in Europe, in favor of stronger economies like France and Germany?
 
They each can vote and have representation according to their share of the total population.
 
Oh. In all matters of the EU?
 
Representation in the European parliament is proportionate to population, but with an advantage to smaller countries (they get more seats per 1 million people).
But, yes, the larger and richer countries have more influence in other ways.
 
Ah okay.
 
3:32 PM
If the net contributors decide they won't pay as much to the European budget for the next 7 years, that is a power the net recipients don't have.
Everything is a complex negotiation.
 
I was talking out of my ass, you know. It's a good way to learn if you have a patient chat buddy. Thanks.
 
E.g. the rich countries, which are critical of anti-democratic events in Poland and Hungary, may try to force those countries to keep their high courts independent, under threat of receiving less money.
Or, if France and Germany together really want something, they have a very strong position on any negotiating table.
It is a subtle game.
 
Okay.
 
So if your point is that, with a more centralised government structure, some problems could be avoided or solved more easily, like the Greek debt crisis, then the answer is possibly yes.
 
But you don't sound like you'd want that.
 
3:36 PM
On the other hand, countries with debt used to devalue their currencies, which helped. With the Euro, Greece cannot do that any more.
In addition, the strength of the European economy kept the rate of the Euro high, which was bad for Greek exports.
So the Euro is a mixed bag for Greece.
@Færd I don't know what I want. The current degree of centralisation seems OK for now.
 
But there doesn't seem to be a way out for a country like Greece like this.
 
In a more centralised government, perhaps some corruption can spread more easily if the core has a problem, as with how Trump is appointing judges and important functionaries left and right throughout the country.
And I think a concentration of power in general is more prone to corruption. If an accident happens at the core, it will be very hard to counter that.
In America, you can get a lot done, as a bad actor, if you manage to influence a single man.
@Færd I think Greece should never have joined the Euro.
But I'm not sure what the solution to the Greek problem is.
 
@Cerberus There are checks and balances.
 
Yes.
But they have limits.
It will take a long time to undue the Trump damage. And they are lucky he didn't do more.
 
Yes. But that's not the only model.
If they had corrected/amended their constitution sensibly, they wouldn't have had a Trump in the first place.
 
3:42 PM
It should be noted that some austerity in Greece was probably warranted. I'm not entirely sure how accurate this article is, but I know there is or were problems with the Greek age of retirement:
> In Greece, trombone players and pastry chefs get to retire as early as 50 on grounds their work causes them late career breathing problems. Hairdressers enjoy the same perk thanks to the dyes and other chemicals they rub into people's scalps.

Then there are masseurs at steam baths: they get an early out because prolonged exposure to all that heat and steam is deemed unhealthy.

Until the Greek debt crisis, northern Europeans looked at Greek early retirement with an amused roll of the eyes. But more and more such loopholes are angering them: they bristle at being asked to pay for their la
In addition, I believe Greece now has a net surplus in their budget (if you discount the huge amounts of interest they pay).
So, in the long term, solutions do exist.
 
Right. To whom does the interest go, eventually?
 
To all who have bought Greek bonds.
 
Ie, the stronger economies of the EU?
So they get richer on the back of another member in relative misery.
 
Various institutions jumped in and bought tons of bonds to save Greece from going bankrupt.
Yes, the interest praesumably goes to those institutions now.
But I don't know at what rate they bought those bonds, commercial rates or special rates?
Last autumn: "More than a year after Greece exited its bailout programs, investors made history in the country Wednesday by buying its short-term debt at a negative yield, meaning they volunteered at least in theory to get less money back than they paid."
That was the commercial rate.
But I think it only applies to newly issued bonds.
 
@Cerberus Ah that's strange.
I think the buyers are going to make profits overall.
 
3:49 PM
Well, people around the world apparently felt that Greece had solved its budget issues enough to make its bonds safe.
 
Or they wouldn't have bought them.
 
@Færd With new bonds, perhaps not.
With existing (older) bonds, most probably.
 
I see.
 
This is the primary surplus, so it would be negative if payment of interest were added.
I'm trying to find out how much interest Greece pays each year.
> In a 2013 report, the IMF admitted that it had underestimated the effects of so extensive tax hikes and budget cuts on the country's GDP and issued an informal apology
 
I was under the impression that this predatory behavior towards Greece was due to EU's structure: lack of centralized government, shared currency, shared central bank, more powerful beneficiaries, etc.
 
3:56 PM
@Cerberus How many arms do you have?
 
I was wrong, by the way: the figures above are without interest payments. Otherwise, the figures would have been negative still.
 
Okay.
 
@Færd I'm not exactly sure what the cause of the problem is. But I think predatory is a big word. Greece made a mess of its own finances.
@Mitch 0. Oh, I meant used to!
 
@Cerberus Maybe
 
The question is, what do you do when a member state has made a mess of things, although this mess is perhaps not entirely its own fault?
 
4:00 PM
@Cerberus Are we still discussing policing or have we moved on to geopolitics?
 
Would you really give them 100 or 200 billion euros, at a time when your own country is going through steep austerity measures itself?
 
And I'm still confused about arms?
 
@Mitch The latter, but you can always pick up the former subject again!
@Mitch It was a typo: I am used to seeing armed policemen.
 
@Cerberus Government spending would be an option, if there was a centralized government.
The chidlren have stopped screaming. I'm going to take a nap.
Talk to you later.
 
Every place has special problems: 2nd amendment history plus 'large' immigrant population (ie 99.9% but less consider themselves so) plus slavery. other countries don't have this combination. So solns for the militarization of the police in the US may not translate to other countries.
@Cerberus Here it seems all police have pistols that are modestly obscured with all the other equipment they have on their tool belts.
But I am always shocked at European airports (maybe just France and UK) where it seems like there's a military guard with a machine gun -in his hands- every hundred yards.
So it's what you're used to.
 
4:07 PM
@Færd But government money is taxpayer money. It has to come from somewhere.
> (2017) The effect of the zero-interest policy is even more clear in the case of Italy. From 1670 billion in 2008, the debt rose to 2270 billion, but Rome now pays only 66 billion euro interest, whereas in 2008 it was still over 80 billion.
...
The debt level of the Southern European countries has drastically increased. In fact, the debt stand of the southern European countries has drastically increased in recent years, although the interest charges did not increase correspondingly. On the contrary, in many cases, they are now even lower than before the financial crisis – thanks to the EC
I think that last "interest rate" should be "yearly amount paid in interest".
The rate has dropped.
So I can't find how much Greece pays on its debt.
But I think the percentage will be a bit more than what Italy pays, though less than in 2017.
Apparently, Italy paid 2.9% in 2017.
Let's say Greece pays the same rate in 2020.
Historically, that is a very low rate.
I remember, in school, we learned that 7% was a normal rate for Holland. I.e. the Dutch government paid a rate of 7% on its debt.
Now, that is of course much lower—much lower still than Italy.
So I suppose the European Central Bank theoretically profits from having saved Greece...but I'm not sure those profits will ever go to anybody. And the interest rate is low.
It's too complicated for me to understand.
 
 
2 hours later…
6:05 PM
What a huge rectangle of text, LOL.
 
 
2 hours later…
8:05 PM
are you hungry?
it's wee hours now.
 
 
1 hour later…
9:10 PM
I asked a question a few years ago and it was left unanswered, so I ask it again in hope of receiving an appropriate answer.
Is a mod allowed to ignore users? Especially here in chat, when there are not many mods online and around to keep things under control, the only available mod seems to have you in their ignore list...
Isn't it considered a sick behavior or deviant behavior?
 
9:47 PM
Puppy or blueberry muffin? I’m having serious doubts about my own image recognition abilities...
 
11:03 PM
Okay @Robusto you weigh in on this:
4
Q: Is the verb for this gesture "wave off?"

deeHere is the definition: to wave off To dismiss or refuse by waving the hand or arm: waved off his invitation to join the group. But can "wave off" also be used for this gesture, communicating a "whatever" with a sprinkle of "oh, come on!" or an "oh, f*** you..."? Are there a...

I'm asking because it's a good question I have no answer to.
"Wave off" is exactly what you'd call this gesture in German (abwinken). Where it's a very common gesture, come to think of it.
"Wave off" is exactly not what I'd call this gesture in English. Where come to think of it, it's not a common gesture at all.
I don't know what I'd call it. But wave off it is not.
I'd probably just reword it with something generic like give up, or if it's purely metaphorical, pick a different gesture entirely that fits the bill. Anything from throwing your hands up in despair to rolling your eyes to blowing raspberries. Whatever. Just not waving off because that's not it.
So, what is it, then.
 
@RegDwigнt I agree.
Rejection and (mild) despair.
"Whatever".
 
11:26 PM
@Cerberus That'd be surprising, if true. I'd read otherwise, but I can't judge for myself.
.
I just learned croissant and crescent are the same word.
Better late than never.
 
@Færd What have you read?
What should the ECB do with any interest it receives?
It can create money all it wants.
I don't know.
No idea how that works.
I do think Greece has to pay interest on bonds held by the ECB, just as on any bond.
And other institutions also hold many Greek bonds.
 
@RegDwigнt To me it looks more like resignation. "Ah, go on then" ... or it could be "I give up" or even "Piss off" in a too-tired-to-deal-with-this-shit-any-lomger kind of way.
"Wave off" wouldn't be my first choice. That would be a sideways wave, not a forward one.
 
11:48 PM
Agreed.
 
Is there a name for the technique to take video that does not really show anything and add dramatic narration telling the viewer what to see?
 
@Cerberus I'd listened to some interviews and talks by Yanis Varoufakis, who served as minister of finance in Greece in 2015.
 
Ah.
And what did he say?
 
He had discussions with people like Joseph Stiglitz and Jeremy Corbyn and Chomsky etc.
Of all that I have retained only the impression that the EU's behavior towards Greece was not nice at all.
 
@JohanLarsson Haha, that doesn't sound familiar to me.
 
11:57 PM
Forgive my forgetfulness. I should get better acquainted with Europe tho.
 
@Cerberus I saw some documentary about fake content and iirc it is a common technique
dunno how to describe it well
 

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