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"Meanwhile, there were 7 million relatively well-paid vocationally orientated jobs which employers simply couldn’t fill in 2019."

If there is a datum which should outrage one and all it is that one. Who is in favor of this? From Bernie to the Koch brothers, and from Hillary to David Duke, who believes that it is good for working people to live in hopeless demi-poverty while industry goes begging for workers? Give me absolute power for one day and I'm going to find some scapegoat for the above and shoot him against a brick wall. Then install AOC as commissar of ... na, fuck, that won't work ... strike a royal commission to find someone who can take charge of it. They say the Swiss train their people for real life in a real economy designed to benefit those same real people. Rotten commies.

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The same thing is true of the Germans. Only 30% go to university- all the rest go through vocational training.

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Bleeding common sense of a squid is all you need. Seems to me the 'higher education' scam (ongoing) is a worser scam than the Big Short of '08. But then, the Krauts have always honored the skilled arbeiter, you don't have to be a lawyer or a doctor or an administrator. Rotten commies.

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Universities are typically geared for academics, not for job training. It's designed that way, but once government funds it, it'll grow and expand and consume the limited resources of those who fall for the propaganda, spending huge sums for pointless degrees (if they ever graduate in which case industry says all of your schooling is worth zero without that certificate) while delaying work and job training for 4+ years when you are most vigorous.

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I think violence in America and the threat to police is overblown. Yes, there are several relatively small areas that are regularly violent, typically those occupied by criminal enterprises offering for sale to a demanding clientele that which authoritarians foolishly prohibit. Most police never deal with an armed criminal, nor have to draw their arms. Stats make it seem like everyone is in danger, but it's quite concentrated.

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Good point. 50% of violent crime in America is confined to 2% of districts. It would be inhumane, however, to neglect them- or indeed to pretend they don't exist...

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Indeed not! If anything, it shows how little the government cares to resolve such a crisis for the poor people who must suffer gangbangers.

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This isn't particularly new; I distinctly remember Blacks (and Democrats) insisting on stronger sentencing for crack cocaine back in the 80s. 20 years later, they were complaining about the sentencing disparities - disparities that they themselves insisted on!

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What I was trying to highlight was the way in which legacy media fashions deeply pernicious availability heuristics that mislead the public and which leads to extremely poor policy decisions on the part of politicians. Having abandoned their role as guardians of the Fourth Estate, the media actually corrupts the process, rather than exposing corruption. Matt Taibbi has written about it in his book Hate Inc.- which deals with the way the monetise making each half of the country hate one another, for the simple reason that negative engagement is the most powerful tool for garnering audiences.

Another example would be immigration. Most Americans are for legal migration, but if we look at history it needs to be the right type. Niall Ferguson gave a talk for Google Zeitgeist in which he detailed the rise of populist movements in America. Trump makes it four times. Each time, conventional politicians stepped in to halt inward migration- until now. The triggers were a foreign-born citizenship rate of around 14%, paired with economic downturns and the economic scarcity they produce.

But Australia proves a model which can tolerate far higher levels of foreign-born citizenship- more than twice as many as America or the UK. The key is to protect blue collar jobs against wage dilution and a decrease in native-born labour participation. It works amazingly well- because regardless of whether a country sends 50% of their kids to university, there are always huge skills gaps, for the simple reason that they don't pick the right courses. They publish a website year-on-year which is pretty consistent. This allows ambitious migrants to train in areas which Australia needs, and which also demand good pay through international demand (so if you have kids, it's a good place to send them for career ideas).

But we hear none of this in media, because market-dominant migrants are more likely to vote for right-leaning parties than their perennially poorer counterparts...

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