• 5714@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      True and the Nordics have plenty of poverty themselves once people look closer.

      (This is just saying it exists, nothing more)

      • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Perfect is the enemy of good.

        Not even a successful society is perfect. It certainly doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try. It’s still better than what most of the rest of the world is doing.

        • zout@fedia.io
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          2 days ago

          It certainly doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try.

          Nobody said we shouldn’t. The point is, we shouldn’t look away from the issues in a country just because they are doing better than others in some cases.

          • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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            2 days ago

            It means that when people advocate for improvements, YOU SHOULD STOP IMMEDIATELY PLAYING CRAB BUCKET.

            Let better be better and then sure raise some issues. Your comment seems intentionally obtuse.

            • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              It means that when people advocate for improvements, YOU SHOULD STOP IMMEDIATELY PLAYING CRAB BUCKET.

              …your argument is that we literally should not criticize ideas until they’re actually implemented and proven to be lacking? How does one establish that something is better without open critique?

              • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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                7 hours ago

                I think it speaks more to who you are as a pwrson that your first reaction is to criticize an idea.

                Negativity begets negativity. I choose to look for positivity and hope first, and criticize later.

            • zout@fedia.io
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              2 days ago

              You’re seeing a motivation behind my comment that isn’t there, so you really shouldn’t call me obtuse. Is Norway doing pretty good? Yes! Could they also do better? Yes! I’m not playing crab bucket, but I’m also not sticking my head in the sand here.

              • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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                2 days ago

                Maybe next time open with the “pretty good” stuff. Before this comment everything cooking was negative which sure looks like crab bucket (not just from you, but also from you) and I’m still leaning toward obtuse by omission tbh.

          • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            What does that even mean? For those of us who aren’t in the know like you are, that phrase doesn’t mean anything to us.

            And if you’re open to a friendly suggestion, nix the “western world” propaganda; focus on explaining the “exploitation of billions in the global south” part.

            • Socialism_Everyday@reddthat.com
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              1 day ago

              Norway doesn’t produce cocoa beans. Norway doesn’t produce cotton, or bananas, or iron ore, or cobalt, or gold, or most basic raw materials you need to run a society. Neither do Spain, or Germany, or France, or the USA. Instead, these countries focus on the production of high value-added goods and services, which they can do because they are historically highly industrialized, developed, and have high levels of education, infrastructure and concentration of productive capital.

              In this manner, Germany imports iron ore from poor countries in the global south at low prices, and exports cars at high prices. In the international market, therefore, one hour of German/French/Norwegian work is exchanged often for tens of hours of work from India, or Congo, or Mexico. This is unequal exchange, and is the pillar of neocolonialism.

              Through political, economical and military powers, the western world has ensured that the global south remains underdeveloped. IMF predatory loans and neoliberal policy impositions, support for fascists or monarchists, coups, or outright military invasions are some of the most common tools the west uses to maintain these countries underdeveloped and with cheap labor.

              • lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com
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                7 hours ago

                In the international market, therefore, one hour of German/French/Norwegian work is exchanged often for tens of hours of work from India, or Congo, or Mexico.

                Explain where the exploitation comes from.

                • Is the argument here that developed goods are worth more on the market than their raw materials & shouldn’t be?
                • Or that a unit of time of more skilled labor to develop those goods from raw materials should earn the same as less skilled labor, so the disparities in their market value is exploitation? If they could earn the same with less skill, then why bother developing skill?
                • It’s not like they govern the foreign countries of international businesses they trade with for raw materials. Is your argument that they shouldn’t trade internationally for raw materials?
                • Socialism_Everyday@reddthat.com
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                  7 hours ago

                  It’s not like they govern the foreign countries of international businesses they trade with for raw materials

                  Not directly, perhaps, but that’s how neocolonialism works. 14 countries in Africa use currency whose central bank is in Paris, western nations keep military forces in many African countries and support only the governments that they want, and when a nation rejects complete exploitation by western corporations, they either apply sanctions (with the explicit aim of “creating hunger, desperation and overthrow of government”), or organize coups to democratically elected leaders, or directly bomb the fuck out of them.

                  More subtle means include IMF loans conditioned to applying neoliberal economic policy. In his 100-page resignation letter from the IMF, former IMF senior economist Davison Budhoo described the extensive and systematic statistical fraud used by the IMF to impose its policies on developing countries, and explained that the consequences of these policies led to massive poverty and starvation. In the letter, Budhoo wrote that the IMF’s policies are made in “utter disregard to local conditions” and lead countries to “self destruct” and “unleash unstoppable economic and social chaos” and also compared the IMF’s structural adjustment policies to a “terrorist attack”. He also stated that the routine policy packages of the IMF “can never serve, under any set of circumstances, the cause of financial balance and economic growth” and that “the ill-gotten, inadvertent power that we revel in wielding over prostrate governments and peoples - can only serve to accentuate world tensions”

                  Is your argument that they shouldn’t trade internationally for raw materials?

                  My argument is that these countries aren’t allowed to industrialize in their own terms with their own companies. It’s either western corporations controlling everything and extracting the wealth to Europe and North America, or murder.

                  • lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com
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                    6 hours ago

                    Not directly, perhaps, but that’s how neocolonialism works.

                    Most of that is the US & UK: sanctions, supporting coups, bombings. No country needs to take IMF loans. As sovereign nations, they don’t need to use a foreign regulated currency & could adopt their own.

                    What does Norway have to do with this: guilt by broad association with western nations?

                    My argument is that these countries aren’t allowed to industrialize in their own terms with their own companies.

                    Again, what does Norway have to do with this? Where is their exploitation?

                    It seems like you’re arguing they shouldn’t trade with Africa much like an economic sanction. I’m sure that’d turn out great for Africans.

                    This is some unclear shit. I think you need to properly define exploitation & identify where Norway’s international economic relations fit that definition.

                    Otherwise, it seems your criticism amounts to “Norway’s developed economy is doing better than economies of other countries they trade with”, which doesn’t necessarily mean they’re exploiting other countries.

      • MrFinnbean@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Care to give some sources to that?

        With quick google-fu Nordics seem to be in pretty comfy positions in world wide rankings. Not at the top but certainly in the best 20%

        Also there is huge difference in the sense that even if you are poor in the nordics you still have right to healthcare and education. At some places you would just be fucked.

        • kungen@feddit.nu
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          2 days ago

          There are people who slip through the cracks (usually those with mental health/drug issues), and that the “basic level” of support hasn’t caught up with inflation…

          But regardless, it’s 10000x better than the US system/the system in most other countries.

    • seejur@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Worth noting that most of the time oil (newly discovered natural resources really)makes a country poorer than richer. See Venezuela and such.

      So good on Norway to not give in to unbridled corruption and out that money on a public fund to make its own citizen wealthy

      • Alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
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        2 days ago

        Well yes, Norway’s leader wasn’t assassinated by the US, followed by sanctions and throwing money and weapons at militant factions. I wonder why…

      • Socialism_Everyday@reddthat.com
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        2 days ago

        This is bad analysis. Natural resources don’t make countries poorer, they make the US/UK/France/Spain/Italy invade you.

        Libya, rich in oil, was the richest country in Africa (and highest Human Development Index) until the west bombed it and triggered a civil war. Iran was on the way to use its oil for its own profits by nationalizing it under the democratically elected leftist government of Mosaddeq until it got blockaded and couped by MI6+CIA and a corrupt monarch got reinstated. Venezuela took millions of people out of poverty until US sanctions came in an attempt to kill the socialist government and put millions through hardship. Saudi Arabia, having a government very cozy with the US, gets away with no US coups, but has 70% of the population being effectively slaves.

        • j_overgrens@feddit.nl
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          2 days ago

          There was a full-blown civil war in Libya well before the intervention of NATO (which had unanimous support from the UN security counicl).

          • Socialism_Everyday@reddthat.com
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            2 days ago

            There was a full-blown civil war in Libya

            And how did the bombing help exactly? Not to mention the western participation in the formation of the civil war itself, with its constant meddling and sanctioning against the Libyan government.

          • Miaou@jlai.lu
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            2 days ago

            Not unanimous, but not vetoed either (Russia and China abstained from voting).

            Sarkozy’s personal interest in the matter also make me doubt France’s wouldn’t have been different under any other government

            Edit: I’m not disagreeing with the whole “the UN allowed it”, and the general unrest in Libya before the intervention. Just adding context

      • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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        2 days ago

        Worth noting that most of the time oil (newly discovered natural resources really)makes a country poorer than richer. See Venezuela and such.

        Hmm, somebody should let the Middle East know that they’re poor.

        More likely, the discovery of oil attracts the worst kind of industrialists, who will exploit the workers into abject poverty, and take all the wealth. It isn’t the oil that makes the people poor, it is the government who sells them out.

    • pelespirit@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      I don’t get your point? The US is one of, if not the wealthiest, country in the world. We made money off of slaves, oil, gold, child labor and now taking advantage of our working class without paying for healthcare. It also used to be innovation, but that’s going away. We should be doing even better. How many of the wealthiest in the world live here?

      • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        The argument isn’t that the US can’t do it, it’s that there are only a few countries that ever could. It’s pitched as some sort of universal fix, but can’t be done without a vast amount of pre-existing wealth.

        • pelespirit@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          It’s pitched as some sort of universal fix, but can’t be done without a vast amount of pre-existing wealth

          Right, which we have. There are also enough wealthy countries and the EU that could stop causing chaos in developing countries while supporting our own, that would make everyone’s lives better.

          • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            You were the first person in this comment chain to mention the US (important to note that the post doesn’t, either). Nobody said the US couldn’t do this, they just explained the reason Norway can.

    • Meron35@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Worth noting that the Nordic model made Norway, and other Nordic countries, quite rich even before they discovered oil.

      It is replicable, and continued to make Nordic countries without oil, rich as well.