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You are on point as always. It is a marvel how less than academically gifted high school students are driven to universities where they are warmly welcomed into social studies and hence into cafes as baristas, the twittersphere and blockading pipelines as born again activists. Even classical studies such as English or History are dead hard to make a career out of. As an Arch. Anth. student, I spent a few years doing temp work until I landed in marketing. I would with foresight better have opted for a vocational digital marketing qualification or something highly specialized and rather more technical, witnessing as I do that getting someone to run a complicated google adwords or facebook campaign can cost up to $200+ an hour. Back in the day a degree meant something, today rather less so and the cost is onerous. Your observations on the bloated administration is also something that infuriates me, as they are parasites.

As an aside about generously paid diversity officers, I watched the online "diversity training" course a friend/government worker had to do. I watched an entire module and came away with the understanding that none of the scenarios would ever play out except in the imagination of someone who has been indoctrinated to suspect the world is full of misogynistic racists who continually oppress angelic POC. The scenario I watched contained caricatures -- a kind, innocent shopper accosted by a thuggish security guard. It made me think of a situation when I visited a Burberry outlet store. As I entered, the security guard looked up and positioned himself discreetly so he could keep me in his eyeline as I moved around and browsed. I thought - well, I'm dressed a bit casually and these are $1200 scarves and $4000 jackets so I can understand this. As I was leaving, a man entered the store and walked purposefully around, looking deliberately to engage with the security guard, and began a tirade about racism and how he was being targeted as a thief, and gratuitously offensive to the shop girls - words I could hear clearly. All of them looked terrified to engage, imagining a future of picketers outside the store. I suspect it is due to the surfeit of social studies degrees that leave people poor, under employed and inclined to invent oppression. I can see the lure of socialism to shop girls and tirading rude man alike, believing they will be elevated and no longer have to suffer these injustices. A responsible government would put policy in place to direct students to actually useful educational streams, look to retain jobs at home and make housing affordable.

Sorry, went a bit off topic there, but agree - as Canada is moving towards a totalitarian system fuelled by the under employed output of our educational system and skilled identitarian lobbyists and professional victims - I can't help but think I should cash out of Canada and move to Costa Rica, which at least has a good health system and weather.

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When I was living down in London, my group of friends met a guy in advertising (or marketing), and one of the girls wanted to know how to get a job with one of the big firms. His advice was get a motorcycle- in those days a foot in the door could be managed by having the ability to zip across London with urgent and confidential information. She was most surprised at the advice.

On the CRT/diversity training I can't help think that there is a certain amount of mind-reading going on- deliberate or otherwise. I was watching a Sky documentary on racism in the UK (we have some of the lowest population level implicit bias scores in the world- the tests are flawed and unreliable, but at the population level the errors cancel out, and have been shown to correlate with known racism, by area).

So there is a Black British footballer in his twenties (he plays for Man City, I believe). He is on a train and sees that whilst he is ticketed, the older white gentleman is not. I would imagine they are both wearing smart casual. His automatic assumption is implicit bias. That may well be the case- but I can tell you from experiences on the commute (which I haven't undertaken, thankfully, for decades), age makes you less likely to be asked to produce a ticket in general (provided you don't look like a drunkard or coarse), and wearing a suit or being engaged typing on a laptop (but not surfing), with inflate your respectability in the eyes of the ticket conductor.

The tragedy is the West is replete with examples of independent well-run schools which buck the trend, and produce miraculous results in poor, high crime, multi-ethnic communities. Vested interests make adapting these principles more broadly, perhaps by creating more extensive excellence programs for headteachers, well nigh impossible.

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Alot of things assumed to be racism (since that is top of mind) does turn out to be something else - a higher threshold for trust of elders in your example. Shopkeepers watch kids lurking around the sweets shelves vs. the old guy looking at newspapers because that's the highest likelihood of where you'd get theft, not that one of the kids was black and its racism. Anyway - It surprises me that government don't play a bigger role in education, Governments can have a meaningful impact on the future, subsidizing cost, neutralizing ideological bias, creating quotas for enrollment tied to projections of labour needs. Recalling it used to be like this in England, at least a little? We have our own transit issues in Toronto Canada - we have streetcars, stupid train like things that go down the middle of busy throughfares making life difficult for everyone. You're supposed to swipe your card as you get on, a swipe thing near every door. Occasional compliance checks always nab a few who thought they'd gift themselves a ride. Big BLM extravaganza about a girl who got caught without having paid her fare, saying it was too busy to reach the machine, this is racism. Next was the media coverage about racism, picketing the TTC offices and virtue signalling about systemic racism. Meanwhile 2 other (white) guys were ticketed as well, but this was not featured in the media until much later as part of the defense investigation the poor conductor had to go through. The white cheaters did not step forward, likely didn't want to advertise themselves as cheaters, but we have BLM here in Toronto that often leave the backstory or important context out that might not allow for a sympathetic portrayal of the desired oppression narrative. And the newspapers who should have contacted the conductor for HIS story wasn't interviewed. Our newspapers and digital media accept billions of dollars of funding from the federal government and so I think our newspapers reflect the government's ambitions, ideologically, which is a disturbing thought.

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It’s what makes people yearn for the totalitarian nightmare which Socialism always becomes, with its poverty inducing economic Armageddon and inclination towards mass murder. It’s why the regulatory burden needs to be shifted away from small businesses and onto the shoulders of large corporations, why we need to massively shift public expenditure away from universities and towards technical and vocational training, and why there needs to be radical reform to housing markets. Because without these changes the temptation of totalitarian Socialism will simply prove too much over time, leaving the next generation to inherit Hell on Earth at their own hands.

This is a super subject Geary. You’ve really tied the essence of the problem together rather too well, because placed together it has an absurd deliberateness about it as much as consequential results of mere globalisation.

As a traditionalist I favour strong borders, democracy, small government intervention, free markets, opportunity, entrepreneurism, competitive markets etc., a social impetus structure designed to encourage an individual to better ones life through effort, but with the caveat that such a structure both encourages wide swathes of public participation and that it is a broadly workable and achievable possibility.

At the same time, housing in the and UK and US, already beset by antiquated, burdensome and archaic planning laws, has become the purvey of an emergent oligopoly with a small number of suppliers buying up the land in a practice known as land banking, and who have- at least in the UK- engaged in price gouging through deliberate undersupply.

Indeed. Spoon feeding bits of clay at exorbitant prices and releasing it bid style for those begging to engage in lifetime bank debts. It’s got to the point that it feels like a giant ponzi scheme between the corporate developer and those lovely bank chaps.

I mean who tags a piece of clay at 100k, or 500k, or a lot more? But of course it’s value addressed to the ongoing competition. Then there’s the suppliers and merchants who are constantly inflating their profits, which are minimally 30% anyways. Windows around 60% profit, kitchens 40-60% sheer profit. Building labour is set by supply and demand so builders go in high, knowing full well that if they fail, that the next contract is only a call away. Anyways, the overall profit to the builder, which is effectively only labour, is around 40%. All along the chain from the soil to the bricks to the windows to the labour the margins are basically doubling the cost of a new home and that’s not really taking account of the land cost which is massive and an argument in of itself.

Next one can compare renting trends over the past 10 years. Whereas formerly young people would rent a house they now often can not; not with all their other associated costs. Some can’t stay with their parents and it may be the case that they’re on minimum age and single. Well what we’re seeing is a massive increase in shared accommodation. A poor mans commune. Landlords are capitalising. Instead of renting off a house for £500 per month, they rent rooms at £350 per month and the renters share the bills. Checking “Rightmove” in my own area where there is still cheap houses to purchase, I found ten pages of shared accommodation before I reached the next affordable tier; the whole house rent bracket.

The point here is that say you pick up a minimum wage of just under £300 per week, possibly in unsafe employment, well you can manage to carve out a semblance of independent life. Maybe even have £100 after paying the essentials.

The comparison to 30 years ago is dismal and stark and young people who would tend to trend with following their parents work and achieve ethos are encountering nothing but walls. They are feeling the pressure on their freedoms and available choices. They are trapped in a position where their costs and desire to mix and mingle, spend and enjoy and be young is compromised by the very costs of having to pay for a roof and food. With all the MSM and leftist communist and woke speak narrative and their lived experience lacking a young persons former perspective, it’s little wonder that many are feeling shut out of traditional conservatism and actually embracing more Marxist attitudes.

Globalisation has created a market that has broken the ability to climb ladders. I’m unsure of the statistics but I heard it to be 60% of the population that is disenfranchised. No longer can an individual country sort out this issue as it’s locked into a global system that is fast making corporate power larger than national power. Each year there is born new numbers with less and less chance of following their parents example. Costs are simply becoming too far out of sync with affordable wages. Leading the masses toward socialism as their favoured outcome.

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I don't really have to add to your comment- I think you've said it all!

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“ it is governments role to ensure a fair system in which the game is not rigged”

A role never to be fulfilled except in myths.

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Agreed. But we should at least attempt to hold them to their duty. That's one of the problems with ideologies- they distract from the real issues without costing anything to the politicians themselves.

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