I'm only allowed three questions - add your own below.
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What next? Nail your flag to the mast.
#2
Posted 2021-September-17, 07:09
Donald Trump has had his day (4 years) in office. politics is about engaging people, not crushing them. he will not return.
it will take many years before electric cars outsell fossil fuel cars. they are still more expensive to buy than petrol/diesel cars
even if the USA does not want to enter another war, the world is not a safe place generally. I guess that its going to have get involved in some military involvement at some time in the future in some place in the world. even if it is not directly involved, it will behind the scenes in some way.
it will take many years before electric cars outsell fossil fuel cars. they are still more expensive to buy than petrol/diesel cars
even if the USA does not want to enter another war, the world is not a safe place generally. I guess that its going to have get involved in some military involvement at some time in the future in some place in the world. even if it is not directly involved, it will behind the scenes in some way.
#3
Posted 2021-September-17, 07:10
Q2: Over what time frame? Per year or cumulative sales? Sales by $ or number of units?
Q3: Over what time frame? The odds of the USA never again in history engaging in a major military action must be close to zero, even if it is just China invading a defeated country devastated by civil war.
Q3: Over what time frame? The odds of the USA never again in history engaging in a major military action must be close to zero, even if it is just China invading a defeated country devastated by civil war.
#5
Posted 2021-September-18, 07:35
I don't have a confident answer to any of the three poll questions. Partly I don't know, partly it depends, as others have said, on how the question is interpreted. Yes, sooner or later the US will engage in military action. One could ask: Will it be sooner than, say, some middle east country takes military action against some other middle east country or will it be later? I don't know the answer there either. My guess would be later.
Here is another question that I don't know the answer to: When, if ever, will the US acknowledge that there are more people who would like to leave Guatemala, Honduras and Haiti (and of course many other places) than the US is willing to accept AND THEN come up with a practical answer as to what we should do about that? I take it as obvious that the US sure as hell hasn't yet done, or come close to doing, the second part of the question. And equally obvious that we will not suddenly decide to take in everyone, or almost everyone, who wished to come. "Give me your poor and huddled masses" was always a poem, not a plan.
Here is another question that I don't know the answer to: When, if ever, will the US acknowledge that there are more people who would like to leave Guatemala, Honduras and Haiti (and of course many other places) than the US is willing to accept AND THEN come up with a practical answer as to what we should do about that? I take it as obvious that the US sure as hell hasn't yet done, or come close to doing, the second part of the question. And equally obvious that we will not suddenly decide to take in everyone, or almost everyone, who wished to come. "Give me your poor and huddled masses" was always a poem, not a plan.
Ken
#6
Posted 2021-September-18, 08:15
deleted
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
#7
Posted 2021-September-19, 06:33
It is notoriously hard to predict what will happen in 5 years.
Fortunately, in 1973 some clever people at a little technical college in Massachusetts made an attempt.
It looked like this http://bit.ly/EndOfTheWorldMIT
I was 15 years old.
Three years later, I bought my first computer - an HP-125.
It was much better than the logbook I was using in 1973 and somewhat better than the slide rule I had the following year.
My abacus still works fine.
Fortunately, in 1973 some clever people at a little technical college in Massachusetts made an attempt.
It looked like this http://bit.ly/EndOfTheWorldMIT
I was 15 years old.
Three years later, I bought my first computer - an HP-125.
It was much better than the logbook I was using in 1973 and somewhat better than the slide rule I had the following year.
My abacus still works fine.
Buck P said:
REM
A tournament, a tournament, a tournament of lies
Offer me solutions, offer me alternatives and I decline
It's the end of the world as we know it
It's the end of the world as we know it
It's the end of the world as we know it
And I feel fine, I feel fine
A tournament, a tournament, a tournament of lies
Offer me solutions, offer me alternatives and I decline
It's the end of the world as we know it
It's the end of the world as we know it
It's the end of the world as we know it
And I feel fine, I feel fine
Fortuna Fortis Felix
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