Anonymous wrote:I am not sure if this should be a political topic or off topic forum posting.
Any idea of what great accomplishments the U.S. has achieved since Neil Armstrong walked on the moon in 1969? We don't have a space program anymore. Are we mostly about health care and education?
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure if this should be a political topic or off topic forum posting.
Any idea of what great accomplishments the U.S. has achieved since Neil Armstrong walked on the moon in 1969? We don't have a space program anymore. Are we mostly about health care and education?
Report Suggests Nearly Half of U.S. Jobs Are Vulnerable to Computerization
Oxford researchers say that 45 percent of America’s occupations will be automated within the next 20 years.
Rapid advances in technology have long represented a serious potential threat to many jobs ordinarily performed by people.
A recent report (which is not online, but summarized here) from the Oxford Martin School’s Programme on the Impacts of Future Technology attempts to quantify the extent of that threat. It concludes that 45 percent of American jobs are at high risk of being taken by computers within the next two decades.
The authors believe this takeover will happen in two stages. First, computers will start replacing people in especially vulnerable fields like transportation/logistics, production labor, and administrative support. Jobs in services, sales, and construction may also be lost in this first stage. Then, the rate of replacement will slow down due to bottlenecks in harder-to-automate fields such engineering. This “technological plateau” will be followed by a second wave of computerization, dependent upon the development of good artificial intelligence. This could next put jobs in management, science and engineering, and the arts at risk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reagan won the Cold War. Probably the biggest contribution to humanity since the end of WWII.
TOTAL NONSENSE! First, Reagan didn't do anything - the USSR dissolved! And second, since WWII we have been involved in so many more horrible and deadly wars (Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan, Iraq) that WWII looks quaint in comparison.
Np. First, While I disagree that Reagan "won" the Cold War, he clearly did something. See, e.g., his policies. Second, given the number of casualties and nuclear bomb, WW II does not look quaint. So try again, bro.
What policies actually ended the cold war? From what I see, Gorbachev had to wait until Reagan was gone to do anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reagan won the Cold War. Probably the biggest contribution to humanity since the end of WWII.
TOTAL NONSENSE! First, Reagan didn't do anything - the USSR dissolved! And second, since WWII we have been involved in so many more horrible and deadly wars (Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan, Iraq) that WWII looks quaint in comparison.
Np. First, While I disagree that Reagan "won" the Cold War, he clearly did something. See, e.g., his policies. Second, given the number of casualties and nuclear bomb, WW II does not look quaint. So try again, bro.
Anonymous wrote:
I can't wait to see what the future holds for us. We've had so many amazing achievements in the last 10 years alone. Hell, the iWatch blows away the first iPhone!
Anonymous wrote:Although Reagan didn't go out and fight on a horse or something he did contribute a lot to the downfall of the soviet union. Either way he should be credited.
Interesting word, credited.
You, your children, your grandchildren, and your great-grandchildren will still be saddled with the debt that Reagan left them while he tried to outspend the Soviets into oblivion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reagan won the Cold War. Probably the biggest contribution to humanity since the end of WWII.
TOTAL NONSENSE! First, Reagan didn't do anything - the USSR dissolved! And second, since WWII we have been involved in so many more horrible and deadly wars (Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan, Iraq) that WWII looks quaint in comparison.
Anonymous wrote:Although Reagan didn't go out and fight on a horse or something he did contribute a lot to the downfall of the soviet union. Either way he should be credited.
Interesting word, credited.
You, your children, your grandchildren, and your great-grandchildren will still be saddled with the debt that Reagan left them while he tried to outspend the Soviets into oblivion.
Although Reagan didn't go out and fight on a horse or something he did contribute a lot to the downfall of the soviet union. Either way he should be credited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reagan won the Cold War. Probably the biggest contribution to humanity since the end of WWII.
TOTAL NONSENSE! First, Reagan didn't do anything - the USSR dissolved! And second, since WWII we have been involved in so many more horrible and deadly wars (Korea, Viet Nam, Afghanistan, Iraq) that WWII looks quaint in comparison.
Are you nuts? WWII look quaint? Failed history did you?
13 million dead in the Holocaust alone. Deaths to civilians from the waging of war, famine and disease attributed directly to the war...including holocaust victims, 50 million plus...and deaths to those who were a part of the war effort between 20 and 25 million. Total dead from all causes between 70 and 85 million. NOTHING that has happened so far exceeds the level of brutality and volume of human suffering during WWII. Beyond the loss of military lives, which is far less than WWII, in those other wars you will have a lot of civilians but the totals in any one of those wars, and the total of all of them, do not exceed WWII. And by no rational and factual measure can one declare they did.
Look up the Khmer rouge, the slaughter of the Kurds when we left Iraq the first time, and the total lose of life of American service men tells half of the story since medical advances have allowed many gravely injured and burned soldiers to survive battlefield injuries - but not live happy or productive lives. Look it up, PP. My father was a medic in WWII and went on to become a doctor - I know the valor of the service people in WWII but that does not change either the facts or the horrors of the subsequent wars.