Quote from: Admiral Yi on January 01, 2026, 03:25:34 AMQuote from: Zoupa on January 01, 2026, 03:21:46 AMHe said Atlantic, not European.
And Europe is part of the Atlantic ascendancy.
Quote from: Zoupa on January 01, 2026, 03:21:46 AMHe said Atlantic, not European.
Quote from: Sheilbh on December 31, 2025, 06:43:14 PMQuote from: Josquius on December 31, 2025, 05:57:14 PMI would say though that even from an Indian or Chinese perspective things are looking very dodgy indeed.When we were born there were almost two billion people in extreme poverty. It's now below a billion. That was driven overwhelmingly by China and India. China alone has gone from 90% of people on less than $3 a day when we were born to eliminating extreme poverty, India's less extreme but gone from about 50% to 5%.
India is really being destroyed by homegrown fascists and China has been backsliding for some time.
Oh sure, when you remember actual food shortages and other such mega poverty then you can forgive a bit of fascism if it gives you an ok quality of life.
But that's not a good thing. Not a sustainable thing.
I think that is the sort of world historical event of my lifetime - the rest is noise. It's a profound transformation of the lives of hundreds of millions of people and driven by development that is more explosive than the industrial revolution - and, in China, driving the energy transition globally (the number one question on energy is whether India is able to skip the carbon intensive energy stage China had or not - if they can't, then we're all fucked).
And in terms of how that matters in Europe, I've mentioned it before because I find it so interesting. Italy's the most extreme example but it's true across Europe (and I suspect the wider "West"). I can't find the exact stat but when we were born the poorest quintile of Italians were around the 75th percentile globally. At the point covid hit they were about 50th percentile. They're now probably in the bottom half. That's not because they've got poorer in real terms as they haven't. It's the emergence of a new global middle class driven by the rise of Asia - and in part a lot of the disruption we face is the shift in the global middle class and who is in/out of it and subsequntly what people can afford. I think a lot of what we're seeing and interpretingas a local phenomenon is ultimately just a consequence flowing from the end of the Atlantic-centred world, which I think was a temporary aberration in any event.
Quote from: Admiral Yi on January 01, 2026, 03:11:34 AMSince the Greeks defeated Persia at Salamis. That's a 2,600 year run. Or so.


Not to mention the season's body count.

Quote from: HVC on January 01, 2026, 12:22:44 AMHaven't seen that yet. Been getting a shit load of AI tai chi ads though.
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