I guess I'll stop climbing mountains then.... it fulfills no purpose...
I guess I'll stop climbing mountains then.... it fulfills no purpose...
These are interesting arguments, but when one looks at the cost of these things compared to, say, defence budgets, one can see where the real waste is. According to Wiki, defence spending across the whole world came to $1917 billion in 2019. That's more than the GDP of almost every country in the world except for the top 10-15 economies (depending on how you assess GDP).Big Tea wrote: ↑28 Oct 2020, 19:23Just last week I was speaking to an in law who said similar about SpaceX being huge amounts of money whic (as she said) could have been used to help endangered animals.Andres125sx wrote: ↑28 Oct 2020, 19:06
Hate it: This is pointless, dangerous, and a waste of money and resources, and proves comunists to be right, the world is extremelly ill if some people will pay 2M for a car they will barely use when that money could save literally thousands lives or even millions if invested correctly... with the cost of one single car! .
But the climbing of mountains is its own purpose - it's sui generis.
While I completely agree with you, how many people does 'defence' keep in jobs? And I do not mean military personnel. Don't know if you are interested enough to look, I just scanned it, there is a study for UK hereJust_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 11:19These are interesting arguments, but when one looks at the cost of these things compared to, say, defence budgets, one can see where the real waste is. According to Wiki, defence spending across the whole world came to $1917 billion in 2019. That's more than the GDP of almost every country in the world except for the top 10-15 economies (depending on how you assess GDP).Big Tea wrote: ↑28 Oct 2020, 19:23Just last week I was speaking to an in law who said similar about SpaceX being huge amounts of money whic (as she said) could have been used to help endangered animals.Andres125sx wrote: ↑28 Oct 2020, 19:06
Hate it: This is pointless, dangerous, and a waste of money and resources, and proves comunists to be right, the world is extremelly ill if some people will pay 2M for a car they will barely use when that money could save literally thousands lives or even millions if invested correctly... with the cost of one single car! .
Now that's waste.
All of that is true of course, but it does not mean those people would be unemployed without the military - if we shift funds elsewhere, there will be jobs elsewhere.Big Tea wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 12:46While I completely agree with you, how many people does 'defence' keep in jobs? And I do not mean military personnel. Don't know if you are interested enough to look, I just scanned it, there is a study for UK hereJust_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 11:19These are interesting arguments, but when one looks at the cost of these things compared to, say, defence budgets, one can see where the real waste is. According to Wiki, defence spending across the whole world came to $1917 billion in 2019. That's more than the GDP of almost every country in the world except for the top 10-15 economies (depending on how you assess GDP).
Now that's waste.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... report.pdf
It says 140,000 but I think they under estimate because they do not include support for those workers. Someone building a ship has to live and get to work, have a GP etc. As in the other case, they pay maybe 20% of that straight back into the coffers, plus a about the same on everything they buy.
It is a minefield, and dammed if we do dammed if we do not.
as i said- dammed if we do dammed if we do notDChemTech wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 12:47All of that is true of course, but it does not mean those people would be unemployed without the military - if we shift funds elsewhere, there will be jobs elsewhere.Big Tea wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 12:46While I completely agree with you, how many people does 'defence' keep in jobs? And I do not mean military personnel. Don't know if you are interested enough to look, I just scanned it, there is a study for UK hereJust_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 11:19
These are interesting arguments, but when one looks at the cost of these things compared to, say, defence budgets, one can see where the real waste is. According to Wiki, defence spending across the whole world came to $1917 billion in 2019. That's more than the GDP of almost every country in the world except for the top 10-15 economies (depending on how you assess GDP).
Now that's waste.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... report.pdf
It says 140,000 but I think they under estimate because they do not include support for those workers. Someone building a ship has to live and get to work, have a GP etc. As in the other case, they pay maybe 20% of that straight back into the coffers, plus a about the same on everything they buy.
It is a minefield, and dammed if we do dammed if we do not.
Exactly. The old "if we scrap all of the military spending, we'll put people out of work" assumes that the companies making planes and bombs won't just go and make something else instead. You don't even need to scrap eberything, just send a bit of the money elsewhere.DChemTech wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 12:47All of that is true of course, but it does not mean those people would be unemployed without the military - if we shift funds elsewhere, there will be jobs elsewhere.Big Tea wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 12:46While I completely agree with you, how many people does 'defence' keep in jobs? And I do not mean military personnel. Don't know if you are interested enough to look, I just scanned it, there is a study for UK hereJust_a_fan wrote: ↑29 Oct 2020, 11:19
These are interesting arguments, but when one looks at the cost of these things compared to, say, defence budgets, one can see where the real waste is. According to Wiki, defence spending across the whole world came to $1917 billion in 2019. That's more than the GDP of almost every country in the world except for the top 10-15 economies (depending on how you assess GDP).
Now that's waste.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... report.pdf
It says 140,000 but I think they under estimate because they do not include support for those workers. Someone building a ship has to live and get to work, have a GP etc. As in the other case, they pay maybe 20% of that straight back into the coffers, plus a about the same on everything they buy.
It is a minefield, and dammed if we do dammed if we do not.
There is a purpose: brand recognition, PR, image, exposure.
For me the highlight was the only raw data they have, and the data they plan to submit for the world record, was the screen recording of the laptop!Cold Fussion wrote: ↑05 Nov 2020, 12:41What kind of clown car operation is this where they are unable to sync a calibrated GPS sensor with a video camera?
Because that isn't easy to fake at all!nzjrs wrote: ↑05 Nov 2020, 13:11For me the highlight was the only raw data they have, and the data they plan to submit for the world record, was the screen recording of the laptop!Cold Fussion wrote: ↑05 Nov 2020, 12:41What kind of clown car operation is this where they are unable to sync a calibrated GPS sensor with a video camera?
Can you tell where you got that number from? I just saw a video which clames exaxtly the 107. And with quite some decent explanation: