16
exilde 16 points ago +16 / -0

I've never felt bullied. If I've felt anything, it's exile.

4
exilde 4 points ago +4 / -0

True, if you can assess a learning disability, there's funding for that. If you can get a non-english student, there's funding for that. If you can get non-english migrant, it's a little gold mine. There are a lot of incentives to retard the learning environment.

9
exilde 9 points ago +9 / -0

Oga Bennett bin get dream to be prime minister for long and e be like say im dream go come true as im party, Yamina win some seats during di last kontri general election.

I forgot how much fun pidgin BBC was

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

Yarvin. His name is Yarvin.

6
exilde 6 points ago +6 / -0

All the incentives in the world won't change the students you're working with, though. Barring any inherent genetic arguments, simply having students that were taught poorly early in their schooling will generally create persistent developmental issues. Tying funding to performance was a great way to start a negative feedback cycle.

21
exilde 21 points ago +21 / -0

Excellent call

Twitter Nigeria ban announcement by FG make Nigerians dey ask wetin go hapun next and questions about VPN - See wetin you need to know.

https://archive.is/wip/M9Lu0

1
exilde 1 point ago +1 / -0

If they're taxing at 100%, I better be getting my ration of vodka.

I get what you're saying, but the point is you need to come up with around 15k per child. 10k minimum. That's a pretty tall ask, on top of what's already mandatory expenses.

3
exilde 3 points ago +3 / -0

Not overlooking them. They're going to be largely responsible for blowing up the economy through their parasitic greed, and they'll be among the first to fly to Israel. Since a lot of them are Zionists, they'll probably be at the forefront of arranging transport for other Jews amidst the situation they create.

The thing is, they create anti-semitism. About the only thing you can do is keep feeding them rope before yet another country has had enough. Still, the media and academia are what shapes the mentality of the next generation. Resisting that subversion seems most important right now.

1
exilde 1 point ago +1 / -0

The state and fed will still take the resources, though. They just won't return it if you don't let them attach their strings. Those become resources unavailable for pooling.

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

Yes, but you're blaming Israel, rather than the ideology that not only supports, but created Israel. You can be pro-Israel and anti-Zionist.

Honestly, though, Israeli support is a small issue to me. The corruption of my culture and people is a far more pressing concern. I don't like Zionists or Neocons, but the Marxists in academia and media are the big problem right now.

3
exilde 3 points ago +3 / -0

Well, anti-Israel implies someone want it to fail, so that wouldn't be accurate for me. I get what you're saying, but the sort of pro-Israel your referring to is generally referenced as Zionism, and quite unapologetically.

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

We look a little more Weimary each day. If we have a sufficient economic shock to kick things off, I could easily see tensions overflow, and a full scale rejection of multiculturalism. I think balkanization may be the more likely option, and there are large swathes of the country that are homogeneous enough that ethnonationalism could take root without much displacement (which is the most moral national arrangement). If things burn too hot, though, out-groups are going to need a place flee. If there's nowhere for them to go, that's when terrible things might happen. That wouldn't benefit anyone.

1
exilde 1 point ago +1 / -0

Because I have no desire for a repeat of the 1940s, if that's what's coming our way. And it seems to be. I don't like human suffering, and the sympathy generated has been wielded as a terrible weapon since.

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

Extremely, though my ancestral lands are overrun with muzzies now. Fucking bongs.

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

Oh, that's Zionism. Fuck that noise. They got their homeland though, and I support them keeping it.

1
exilde 1 point ago +1 / -0

If Israel existed in 1935, history would have played out a lot differently.

4
exilde 4 points ago +4 / -0

Why would anyone be anti-Israel? Makes no sense.

I mean, you're correct on where the sub will likely be, but being anti-Biden and anti-China is just being anti-anti-American.

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

Yes, and in the absense of that, libertarianism is very poor fit. It has no solutions for restoring or maintaining a virtuous population. The open borders thing just adds insult to the naivety, but I'm glad it's falling out of favor.

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

Are monarchists acceptable?

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

That's good to hear. The utopianism is what ultimately turned me off to it. It defies basic human nature, even if they get market capitalism correct. Hopefully, they'll get to the questions of virtue and self-control, and whether liberty can exist without them.

3
exilde 3 points ago +3 / -0

It's not a free and voluntary movement of people

While there is certainly an impetus on both governments and corporations to see this movement, you can't say with a straight face that it isn't voluntary. It's not free, but with how poor enforcement is, it may as well be unfettered.

The colonization effect you refer to is just people who can acquire a better standard of living than they're leaving, even if it's worse relative to the standard they're moving to. Of course they'll take that deal. It doesn't need a nefarious scheme, because it's simply the best option.

International trade should mostly exist in the space where autarky is impractical or highly inefficient, based on geography and resource distribution. A nation grows wealth when it doesn't bleed value.

2
exilde 2 points ago +2 / -0

I can't say I really hear people use the phrase "free trade" outside of international trade policy. When talking about domestic trade, it's usually phrased as "free market".

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