@xxrabiatorxx Aus dem Winkel sieht es natürlich so aus.
Sieht man sich das ganz von oben an, dann sieht es so aus.
Original anzeigen (0,2 MB)Dieses Bild wurde um Punkt 12 Uhr, während dem Höhepunkt der Amtseinführung gemacht.
Jan. 20, 2009 Inauguration, 11AM | Jan. 20, 2017 Inauguration, 12PM
@Maite Maite schrieb:Ultrakonservative Juden und Siedler feiern Trump ebenfalls, machst du da auch Judenwitze?
Wenn mir ein guter einfallen würde, dann würde ich ihn machen.
Diese Ironie verlangt schon nach einem Witz.
Abgesehen davon finde ich ultrakonservative Juden auch unausstehlich.
@Deepthroat23 Deepthroat23 schrieb:Das bedeutet für dich, wer Nationalismus Predigt ist Bruder im Geiste des Ku Klux Klans.
Konsequent zu Ende Gedacht führt Nationalismus genau da hin.
Ich habe kürzlich an anderer Stelle erklärt warum Nationalismus nicht automatisch bedeutet, dass die Interessen des eigenen Landes an erste Stelle setzt.
Diese Erklärung greift auch hier. Ich bin zu faul die jetzt zu übersetzen:
Nationalism is inherently irrational and leads to conflict, discrimination and other irrational actions.
There is also no historical correlation between nationalist ideology and putting the countries best interests first.
In fact, nationalist movements have consistently hurt their own countries more than anything.
In most cases nationalism leads to scapegoating. The people unite and blame a scapegoat for their problems. This is always a very populist way of addressing problems but almost never the right way.
Trump is blaming Mexicans, immigrants, foreigners, China, minorities and many other groups for the problems the US is facing.
This is a populist, nationalist narrative and the reason its dangerous is because it fuels conflicts between the groups and most importantly it fails to recognize the actual root causes of the problems.
Example:
The reason for manufacturing jobs disappearing over the recent decades is not China or Mexico and trade deals. The reason is automation, globalization and the simple fact that the education system in the US failed to adapt to the changing economic realities.
Automation and Globalization are both tremendously positive, so we can't get rid of these things. That would be like banning cars because we don't want the people caring for horses to lose their jobs.
But the US fucked up when it comes to education.
Today 60% of the American workforce are untrained workers. 30% are college educated.
If we look at other developed nations we see the 30% college educated figure everywhere. All the developed nations have between 25 and 35% of their workforce college educated.
But where the US differs is with the 60% untrained workers.
Germany for example only has something between 5 and 10% untrained workers.
They have a dual education system with an apprenticeship system. Around 60% of the german workforce went through at least one 3 year apprenticeship where they learned a trade.
Why is that important? The simple jobs untrained workers do are the ones that disappear due to automation and outsourcing.
Skilled workers however can't be replaced by machines or cheap untrained workers in Asia.
It fixes the problem the US is facing.
Because of Trumps nationalistic approach he is ignoring the real problem: An outdated education system that leads to 60% of the workforce being untrained workers.
And he is blaming it on different scapegoats and creating tensions.
=> Not only is he creating new problems: Possible trade wars with China/Europe because of his protectionist measures.
He is also failing to address the old problems: The education system not keeping pace with economic realities.
Even though he claims with his nationalistic rhetoric to put the countries best interests first, he is doing the exact opposite.