



Quote from: crazy canuck on November 26, 2025, 10:48:03 AMI agree, Jury trials are essential to the administration of justice in a common law jurisdiction.Something it seems Keir Starmer agreed with when he was a humble barrister writing for the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers house mag, Socialist Lawyer (that feels like more of a defined term than an appealing title
), back in 1992 when he called for all trials to be jury trials regardless of the expense 
Quote from: The Minsky Moment on November 26, 2025, 11:11:32 AMMartin Wolf's editorial in the FT, worth reading: https://on.ft.com/48iyoODI work for a very exposed multinational. We try to de-risk by going for a local-for-local strategy. But with three blocks: USMCA, China and European Union. This includes RD, procurement, supply chains, production, integration with local cloud services, etc. Sales was always local anyway. I guess that's the general approach of the German economy as leaning strong towards the US at the cost of giving up on China is not a sustainable or reliable model.
The subject matter is a review of a book by a US economist Neal Shearing, The Fractured Age. Shearing argues that the world in splitting into two competing economic blocs, one led by the US and one by China. He argues that the US-led bloc will triumph because it is far stronger economically.
Wolf points out an obvious flaw in Shearing's argument: he assumes that Europe is "strongly aligned" in the US bloc, along with other traditionally US-aligned countries like Japan, Canada, and Australia, and that other countries like Mexico, South Korea, and Turkey "lean" US
All that would have seemed completely justifiable at most points from 1945 until January 20, 2025. But it seems ludicrous to argue in November 2025 that the EU and the USA are "strongly aligned." And that is why the Trump administration has been so catastrophic diplomatically; it has weakened both the US and Europe drastically as against China.
What is interesting is that Shearing's "US aligned" bloc combined has significantly more combined GDP then either the US or the "China bloc". It does not seem to be unavoidably inevitable that a split of the world economy into blocs would have to be two blocs . . .
Like, literally, the update has been out for what, an hour, and the thread is dominated by that. Page created in 0.052 seconds with 14 queries.