The snare in which humanity has been caught is an economics—great industry and commerce in service to great markets, with ethical restraint and respect for the distinctiveness of cultures, including our own, having fallen away in eager deference to profitability....The prestige of what was until very lately the world economic order lingers on despite the fact that the system itself is now revealed as a tenuous set of arrangements that have been highly profitable for some people but gravely damaging to the world.
Showing posts with label fairness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fairness. Show all posts
Sunday, May 24, 2020
Friday, March 22, 2019
I'm a fugitive from injustice
But I'm goin' to be free...
What About Me? Quicksilver Messenger Service
But I'm goin' to be free...
What About Me? Quicksilver Messenger Service
Friday, March 01, 2019
The populist wave coursing through the western world is only the visible part of a soft power emanating from the working classes that will force the elites to rejoin the real movement of society or else to disappear.
Christophe Guilluy, quoted by James McAuley in the New York Review (March 21, 2019)
Christophe Guilluy, quoted by James McAuley in the New York Review (March 21, 2019)
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Such as only meddle with things subject to the conduct of human capacity, are excusable in doing the best they can: but those other fellows that come to delude us with assurances of an extraordinary faculty, beyond our understanding, ought they not to be punished, when they do not make good the effect of their promise, and for the temerity of their imposture?
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
Labels:
blame,
criticism,
fairness,
influence,
leadership,
lies,
Montaigne,
predators,
road rules
Friday, September 29, 2017
The nation’s labor market continues to bifurcate, separating the workers lucky enough to get the high-skill jobs our economy has newly created (and get paid accordingly) from those stuck with jobs for which automation has taken away the need for skills and that therefore pay very little.
Benjamin M. Friedman, New York Review (October 12, 2017)
Benjamin M. Friedman, New York Review (October 12, 2017)
Labels:
capitalism,
change,
economy,
fairness,
globalism,
inequality,
jobs,
misery,
modernity,
politics,
rage,
society,
technology,
US
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)