Olá, Visitante. Por favor entre ou registe-se se ainda não for membro.

Entrar com nome de utilizador, password e duração da sessão
 

Mostrar Mensagens

Esta secção permite-lhe ver todas as mensagens colocadas por este membro. De realçar que apenas pode ver as mensagens colocadas em zonas em que você tem acesso.


Mensagens - Lark

Páginas: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 232
41

Deveria ser possível um Cidadão Europeu candidatar-se a outra Nacionalidade .

É criminoso o facto de sequestrar Cidadãos a viver num País que não zela por eles.

Nesta concorrência ente Países, os que ficassem vazios seria a maior demonstração
da ineficácia das políticas de Governo.

Se as pessoas querem sair é porque quem Governa não cria as condições para
uma vida normal.

hmmm? !
já és um cidadão europeu.
podes circular livremente e ires para onde quiseres. trabalhar e viver. para um país que aches que crie condições para uma vida normal.
podes ir agora mesmo.
vai e não voltes.

L

42
uma musica bem antiga, mas com boa voz e poema curto


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeXqtzusIU0&feature=share


gostei mais dessa versão do que a da nina simone.
! No longer available

e eu gosto muito de nina simone.

L

43
É notável!
Depois dos atentados, os franceses disseram não ao medo.

Medrosos de todo o mundo, ponham os olhos nisto.

L

44
Política e Economia Política / Front National.... Puf..
« em: 2015-12-13 20:13:55 »
National Front collapses in France's regional runoff election

Marine Le Pen's extreme rightist National Front failed to break through and win power in France's regional elections on Monday.

Marine Le Pen's far-right National Front collapsed in French regional elections Sunday after dominating the first round of voting, according to pollsters' projections.

Le Pen had been riding high after extremist attacks and an unprecedented wave of migration into Europe, and the party came out on top in six of France's 13 newly drawn regions in the first-round vote a week ago. But projections by France's major polling firms suggested that failed to translate into any second-round victories.

Three polling agencies projected Le Pen and her niece both lost their bids to run two French regions. Ipsos, Ifop and TNS-Sofres projected that Le Pen won around 42 per cent of the vote in the Nord-Pas de Calais region, compared with about 57 per cent for conservative Xavier Bertrand.

Le Pen's niece, Marion Marechal-Le Pen, was projected to win about 45 per cent in the southern Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur region. Conservative Nice Mayor Christian Estrosi was projected to win about 55 per cent.

The Socialists pulled their party out of both races and it appears that many voters cast ballots to prevent the once-pariah National Front from gaining power.

The polling agencies base their projections on actual vote count in select constituencies. Official results are expected early Monday.

Turnout figures were 7 per cent higher than for the previous regional elections in 2010, with 50.4 per cent of those eligible to vote casting ballots by 2 p.m ET, three hours before polls were to close in big cities, according to the Interior Ministry. The second-round turnout at the same time five years ago was 43. 4 per cent.

Candidates have tried to lure to the ballot box the nearly 50 per cent of those who failed to vote in the Dec. 6 first round, and those votes appeared to have been decisive.

The once-powerful Socialist Party, which currently controls all but one of France's regions, came in a poor third place in the first round and pulled out of key races in hopes of keeping the National Front from gaining power. Former president Nicolas Sarkozy's party came in a strong second, and hoped to make substantial gains in Sunday's runoff.

Winning control of any region would have been an unprecedented boost for the National Front — and especially for Le Pen's hopes for the presidency in 2017.

The atmosphere in the hall in Henin-Beaumont where National Front supporters were gathered to watch election results was grim, in stark contrast to a week earlier when Le Pen won more than 40 per cent of the vote.

The region where Marine Le Pen was a candidate includes the port city of Calais, a flashpoint in Europe's migrant crisis this year, and suffers high unemployment. Bertrand, a former labor minister, is from former President Nicolas Sarkozy's mainstream conservative Republican party.

There was an especially marked jump in turnout Sunday around Calais compared to the first round.

Marechal-Le Pen, 26, is the youngest legislator in France's Parliament. She has used a soft touch to deliver hard messages on migrants and Muslims that outdo her tough-talking aunt.

The National Front has racked up political victories in local elections in recent years, but winning the most seats in an entire regional council would have been a substantial success.

The election was seen as an important measure of support for Le Pen ahead of 2017 presidential elections.

The French, more than many other nations, have a very defined value system and fear that allowing a party associated with extremism to take power would damage their sense of identity.

Le Pen cast her ballot in the northern city of Henin-Beaumont, one of 11 run by the National Front.

She denounced "this giant campaign of insults, slander, fear" by her rivals during a bitter campaign. Socialist Prime Minister Manuel Valls has called the National Front a "scam" that "fools the French" and a divisive party that could "lead to civil war."

The governing Socialists ordered their candidates to withdraw from the regions where Le Pen and Marechal-Le Pen were running and to vote for the right to block their candidacies.

The Socialist candidate refused to pull out in a third region, in the east, where the projections showed the National Front's No. 2, Florian Philippot, losing as well.

Councilors elected in regional elections are responsible for local affairs such as economic development, transportation and public education.

fonte

45
So what happens when you take certain snippets from the holy text, read them aloud and tell people the words are from the Koran?

That's what Dutch YouTube duo, Dit Is Normaal, wanted to know.

So they wrapped up a copy of the Bible in a Koran cover, read out a bunch of the most shocking passages, asked people what they thought and what happened?

Exactly what you'd expect, unfortunately.

! --------


L

46
este video do site que o Incognitus indicou é extremamente esclarecedor:

video Indicado pelo Inc


recomendo ver até ao fim.

L

47
Também ninguém disse que era ilimitada...

De resto, a concentração de CO2 na atmosfera já explodiu acima de qualquer registo histórico. Mas a temperatura, não. Já agora, historicamente o CO2 segue a temperatura com um lag (e não ao contrário).

O CO2 explodiu de 280 ppm para 400 ppm. A temperatura não - dizes tu! Os climatólogos não é isso que dizem.
fonte para a afirmação do lag CO2 / temperatura?
não é que não acredite mas gosto de consultar o que é dito e principalmente quem o diz.
citar hired guns como aquele que citaste no outro tópico, não vale a pena.

L

48
Sobre absorver mais/menos: coisas como a vegetação absorvem mais consoante a concentração atmosférica. Basicamente a vegetação cresce mais com mais CO2, e no processo absorve-o (o carbono vai para constituinte das plantas). Existem processos do género no mar, também, embora aí o balanço líquido seja mais complexo.

coisas como a vegetação...?

os organismos fotosintéticos absorvem CO2 e transformam-no em hidratos de carbono, oxigénio e água.

6CO2 + 12H2O + Energia luminosa → C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O

plantas, bactérias e algas, vivendo no mar ou em terra.

a capacidade de um organismo fotosintético absorver CO2, não é ilimitada.
se fosse ilimitada teriamos enormes florestas e savanas, o mar cheio cianobactérias e algas e nenhum CO2 na atmosfera.

O CO2 só é absorvido - transformado em biomassa - pelas plantas, se houver água e nitrogénio disponível.

L






49
Comunidade de Traders / Re: Krugman et al
« em: 2015-12-12 22:32:44 »
É pá! O Krugman está em Portugal e não me disse nada?
Magoei...!

Está cá para uma homenagem póstuma ao Silva Lopes com quem trabalhou nos anos setenta (em portugal) , aquando da primeira intervenção do FMI.

krugman:

I’m in Portugal — sorry, too jet-lagged to post music this week — where I am attending a conference in memory of Jose da Silva Lopes. (No, I’m not doing interviews — I’m spending my spare time with friends.) And I have been doing some homework about the terrible times Portugal has recently suffered. What especially caught my eye was this:



We used to think that high labor mobility was a good thing for currency unions, because it would allow the union’s economy to adjust to asymmetric shocks — booms in some places, busts in others — by moving workers rather than having to cut wages in the lagging regions. But what about the tax base? If bad times cause one country’s workers to leave in large numbers, who will service its debt and care for its retirees?

Indeed, it’s easy conceptually to see how a country could enter a demographic death spiral. Start with a high level of debt, explicit and implicit. If the work force falls through emigration, servicing this debt will require higher taxes on those who remain, which could lead to more emigration, and so on.

How realistic is this possibility? It obviously depends on having a sufficiently large burden of debt and other mandatory expenditure. It also depends on the elasticity of the working-age population to the tax burden, which in turn will depend both on the underlying economics — is there a strongly downward-sloping demand for labor, or is it highly elastic? — and on things like the willingness of workers to move, which may depend on culture and language.

Portugal, with its long tradition of outmigration, may be more vulnerable than most, but I have no idea whether it’s really in that zone.

One thing you might wonder is whether currency union makes any difference here. Can’t adverse shocks produce emigration and a death spiral regardless of currency regime? Yes, but. With a flexible exchange rate, adverse shocks will cause depreciation and a fall in real wages; under a currency union, they will produce unemployment for an extended period, until the grinding process of internal devaluation restores competitiveness. And everything I’ve seen says that migration is much more sensitive to unemployment than to wage differentials.

Now, it’s true that emigration in an economy with mass unemployment doesn’t immediately reduce the tax base, since the marginal worker wouldn’t have been employed anyway. But it sets things up for longer-run deterioration.

Oh, and Lisbon is really lovely despite all — and seems, justifiably, to be attracting a lot of tourists, which surely helps.

Now off to my friends’ house.

Krugman

50
Quer dizer que o compromisso será do tipo de limitar o CO2 ao que a natureza consegue absorver. Mas o que a natureza consegue absorver é variável (absorve mais se for emitido mais, absorve menos se for emitido menos) pelo que no fim a coisa tinha que tender para zero.

continuo sem perceber. 'absorve mais se for emitido mais, absorve menos se for emitido menos' ? !!

L

51
o Fabius antes que alguém se arrependesse, bateu com martelo e declarou o acordo feito.

olhó Gore todo contente


L

52
Tb vi algumas descrições engraçadas, como dizerem que aquilo implicaria reduzir as emissões de CO2 a zero. O que seria interessante mas teríamos que matar toda a gente.

onde viste isso?

E claro, a parte da razão para terem que ir para zero prendia-se com a natureza absorver menos quando emitimos menos (sendo que o critério seria as emissões não poderem ultrapassar o que a natureza absorve)..

não percebi. o que é que isto quer dizer?

L

53
LE BOURGET, France — With the sudden bang of a gavel Saturday night, representatives of 195 countries reached a landmark climate accord that will, for the first time, commit nearly every country to lowering planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions to help stave off the most drastic effects of climate change.

Delegates who have been negotiating intensely in this Paris suburb for two weeks gathered for the final plenary session, where Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius of France asked for opposition to the deal and, hearing none, declared it approved.

With that, the delegates achieved what had been unreachable for two decades: a consensus on the need to shift from carbon-based fuels and a road map for the 195 nations to do so.

Though the deal did not achieve all that environmentalists, scientists and some countries had hoped for, it set the table for more efforts to slow the slide toward an unlivable planet.

It was an extraordinary effort at global diplomacy. Supporters argued that no less than the future of the planet was at stake, and in the days before the final session, they tried relentlessly to persuade skeptical nations.

As they headed into the cavernous hall late Saturday, representatives of individual countries and blocs expressed support for a deal hammered out in a final overnight session on Friday. After a day of stops and starts, Mr. Fabius, the president of the climate conference, declared a consensus and struck the gavel at 7:26 p.m., abruptly closing formal proceedings that had threatened to go into the night.

The hall erupted in cheers as leaders like Secretary of State John Kerry and former Vice President Al Gore stood to applaud President François Hollande of France; his ecology minister, Ségolène Royal; his special envoy, Laurence Tubiana; and the executive secretary of the United Nations climate convention, Christiana Figueres.

South Africa’s environment minister, Bomo Edna Molewa, called the accord the “first step in a long journey that the global community needs to undertake together.”

At its heart is a breakthrough on an issue that foiled decades of international efforts to address climate change. Previous pacts required developed economies like the United States to reduce greenhouse gas emissions but exempted developing countries such as China and India.

The new accord changes that dynamic, requiring action in some form from every country. But the echoes of the divide persisted during the negotiations.

Delegates received the final draft of the document Saturday afternoon, after a morning when the text was promised but repeatedly delayed. They immediately began parsing it for language that had been the subject of energetic debate, in preparation for a voice vote on whether the deal should become law.

All evening, tense excitement was palpable. The delegates rose to their feet to thank the French team, which drew on the finest elements of the country’s traditions of diplomacy to broker a deal acceptable to all sides.

France’s European partners recalled the coordinated Nov. 13 terrorist attacks in Paris, which killed 130 people and threatened to cast a shadow over the negotiations. But, bound by a collective good will toward France, countries redoubled their efforts.

“This demonstrates the strength of the French nation and makes us Europeans all proud of the French nation,” said Miguel Arias Cañete, the European Union’s commissioner for energy and climate action.

Yet amid the spirit of success that dominated the final hours of the talks, Mr. Arias Cañete reminded delegates that the accord was the start of the real work. “Today, we celebrate,” he said. “Tomorrow, we have to act. This is what the world expects of us.”

The new deal will not, on its own, solve global warming. At best, scientists who have analyzed it say, it will cut emissions by about half of what is needed to prevent an increase in atmospheric temperatures of 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit. That is the point, scientific studies have concluded, at which the world will be locked into devastating consequences, including rising sea levels, severe droughts and flooding, widespread food and water shortages, and more destructive storms.

But the agreement could be an inflection point in human history: the moment when, because of a huge shift in global economic policy, the inexorable rise in carbon emissions that started during the Industrial Revolution began to level out and eventually decline.

Unlike at the climate summit meeting in Copenhagen in 2009, Mr. Fabius said, the stars for this assembly were aligned.

As negotiators from countries representing a self-described “high-ambition coalition” walked into the plenary session shortly before noon, they were swarmed by cheering bystanders. The coalition, formed to push for ambitious environmental provisions in the deal, includes rich countries such as the United States and members of the European Union; island nations like Tuvalu and Kiribati, which are vulnerable to rising sea levels; and countries with the strongest economies in Latin America, such as Brazil.

Representatives of the group wore lapel pins made of dried coconut fronds, a symbol of the Marshall Islands, whose climate envoy, Tony de Brum, helped form the coalition. Developing countries with the highest emissions, such as China and India, are not members.

Scientists and world leaders had said the talks here were the world’s last, best hope of striking a deal that would begin to avert the most devastating effects of a warming planet.

The final language did not fully satisfy everyone. Representatives of some developing nations expressed consternation. Poorer countries had pushed for a legally binding provision requiring that rich countries appropriate at least $100 billion a year to help them mitigate and adapt to the ravages of climate change. In the deal, that figure appears only in a preamble, not in the legally binding portion.

“We’ve always said that it was important that the $100 billion was anchored in the agreement,” said Tosi Mpanu-Mpanu, a negotiator for the Democratic Republic of Congo and the incoming leader of the Least Developed Countries coalition. In the end, though, they let it go.

It was not immediately clear what horse trading and arm twisting had brought the negotiators into accord. But in accord they were, after two years of international talks in dozens of world capitals, two weeks of focused negotiations in a temporary tent city here, and two all-night, line-by-line negotiations.

While top energy, environment and foreign policy officials from nearly every country offered positions on the text, ultimately it fell to France, the host, to assemble the final document and see through its approval.

Some countries objected to the speed with which Mr. Fabius banged down the gavel. Nicaragua’s representative, Paul Oquist, said his nation favored a global cap on emissions, a political nonstarter. He said the deal unfairly exempted rich nations from liability for “loss and damage” suffered by those on the front lines of climate change.

The national pledges will not contain warming to 2 degrees Celsius. And more recent scientific reports have concluded that even preventing that amount of warming will not be enough.

Vulnerable low-lying island states had pushed for the more stringent target over the objections of major oil producers like Saudi Arabia. But that target is largely considered aspirational and is not legally binding.

The agreement sets a vague goal of having global emissions peak “as soon as possible,” and a schedule for countries to return to the negotiating table every five years with plans for tougher polices. The first such meeting will take place in 2020.

The accord also requires “stocktaking” meetings every five years, at which countries will report how they are reducing their emissions compared with their targets. And it includes language requiring countries to monitor, verify and publicly report their emission levels.

Monitoring and verification had been among the most contentious issues, with negotiators wrangling into Saturday morning. The United States had insisted on an aggressive, uniform system for countries to publicly report their emissions, and on the creation of an outside body to verify reductions. Developing nations like China and India had demanded that they be subject to a less stringent form of monitoring and verification.

The final draft requires all countries to use the same reporting system, but it lets developing nations report fewer details until they are able to better count their emissions.

Some elements of the accord are voluntary, while others are legally binding. That hybrid structure was specifically intended to ensure the support of the United States: An accord with binding targets would be legally interpreted as a new treaty and would have to go before the Senate for ratification. Such a plan would be dead on arrival in the Republican-controlled Senate, where many question the established science of climate change and hope to thwart President Obama’s climate change agenda.

CONTINUE READING THE MAIN STORY
568
COMMENTS
As a result, all language on the reduction of carbon emissions is essentially voluntary. The deal assigns no concrete reduction targets to any country. Instead, each government has crafted a plan to lower emissions at home based on the country’s domestic politics and economy.

The accord uses the language of an existing treaty, the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, to require countries to verify their emissions and to periodically put forth tougher domestic plans.

“This agreement is highly unlikely to trigger any legitimate grounds for compelling Senate ratification,” said Paul Bledsoe, a climate change official in the Bill Clinton administration. “The language itself is sufficiently vague regarding emissions pledges, and presidents in any event have frequently used their broad authority to enter into these sorts of executive agreements.”

nyt

L

54
Política e Economia Política / Re: Donald J. Trump
« em: 2015-12-12 21:30:45 »
http://www.publico.pt/mundo/noticia/donald-trump-destronado-nas-sondagens-do-partido-republicano-1713219

Ben Carson, um neurocirgião reformado que comparou o Obamacare à escravatura, ultrapassou o milionário numa sondagem NBC/The Wall Street Journal.

voto contra sistema  e popular


isso são old news (3 de Novembro).
entretanto o Trump já recuperou o primeiro lugar e o Carson está numa tendência de desaparecimento...
para andar em cima disto tem que ser diariamente.
num mês as coisas alteram-se radicalmente.

L

55
Política e Economia Política / Re: Donald J. Trump
« em: 2015-12-12 18:45:46 »
quanto ao Trump - pessoa. É um con artist.
Isto que ele está a fazer não é mais do que a promoção do produto 'The Donald'.
Ele próprio não acredita em mais de metade das coisas que diz.
Os pollsters dizem-lhe que parte do público está cheio de medo: dos mexicanos, dos árabes, dos sírios, da modernidade, de tudo e mais alguma coisa...
E ele apela a esses medos todos. É simples.

Com a notoriedade que tinha antes disto, fez um show com bastante êxito: The Apprentice.

Com a notoriedade que vai ganhar depois deste carnaval eleitoral, fica com uma capacidade negocial enorme, gigantesca, no que respeita às grandes produtoras televisivas.

E vai concerteza ter um show muito mais lucrativo do que o apprentice foi.

Isto, porque os negócios imobiliários dele nunca deram nada que se visse.
O pai deixou-lhe uma fortuna e ninguém faz ideia de quanto ele ainda tem; pensa-se que está falido há muito tempo. daí os shows televisivos.

politicamente... está-se borrifando. a realidade política dele deve andar à volta do centro, talvez até um pouco para a esquerda (no contexto americano).

o que ele defende na campanha... é ditado pelos surveys. 'de que é que os americanos brancos têm mais medo?' e ele vá de apelar a esse medo.
se as polls dissessem que o medo du jour era de borboletas, ele declarava imediatamente que só ele podia exterminar as borboletas e que iria construir uma rede 'so big!' que nenhuma conseguiria escapar.

L

56
Política e Economia Política / Re: Donald J. Trump
« em: 2015-12-12 17:10:57 »


O Mundo atual:

- Donald Trump diz disparates: os media e guardiões da moral crticam

- Tsipras, Krugman, Corby, etc... dizem disparates: os media e os guardiões da moral
aplaudem

Estas discussões acerca das dinâmicas Sociais do séc XXI estão inquinadas à partida.

O fascismo de esquerda está a ganhar força e quer obrigar o normal a ser uma minoria.

a falácia da simetria...

'a direita diz disparates mas a esquerda também.
são iguais só que sinal diferente.
'

o trump diz enormes disparates; a hillary não diz; o sanders não diz.
não há simetria.

a extrema-direita americana (praticamente não existe direita moderada) unipolarizou os disparates; unipolarizou a xenofobia, a misoginia, o racismo e acima de tudo o bullshiting.

não há simetria.

L

57
Política e Economia Política / Re: Donald J. Trump
« em: 2015-12-12 00:24:14 »
Goose-Steppers in the G.O.P.
 
Well, he’s got the Hitler vote. The neo-Nazi website, Daily Stormer, was out and proud earlier this week: “Heil Donald Trump — the Ultimate Savior.” After endorsing the Republican presidential front-runner earlier this year for his call to deport 11 million Mexican immigrants, the fomenters of American fascism have now added an apt twist to his slogan, one not far from the truth of the campaign: “Make America White Again.”

Nazis — I hate these guys. Oh, but they’re a tiny minority of pink-faced malcontents living in basements with the windows taped up. Everybody hates them. Add to that supporters of the Ku Klux Klan, who’ve thrown in with Trump as well. David Duke, a former grand wizard of the Klan, liked everything he heard from Trump this week, embracing him for standing up for white nationalism.


And sure, all the little Hitlers probably don’t amount to a hill of beans. But what about the 35 percent of Republican voters, in the New York Times/CBS News poll, who say they’re all in with the man sieg heiled by aspiring brownshirts and men in white sheets?

It’s a very ugly political moment, but there it is: The Republican Party is now home to millions of people who would throw out the Constitution, welcome a police state against Latinos and Muslims, and enforce a religious test for entry into a country built by people fleeing religious persecution. This stuff polls well in their party, even if the Bill of Rights does not.

Trump’s proposal — “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States” — is not just flotsam from the lunatic fringe. Well, it is. But the fringe is huge: Early polls show a plurality of Republican voters agree with Trump on banning all Muslims. And many would go even further.

“Add in every other kind of immigrant and it’s perfect,” tweeted Ann Coulter, who sells xenophobia as a mean girl provocateur, with many friends in the far right media universe.

Trump himself doesn’t seem to care about comparisons to the buffoonish (Mussolini), the truly scary (the evil one admired by the Daily Stormer) or the fictional — worse than Voldemort, as J. K. Rowling tweeted.

He sloughed off the fascism talk by associating his proposal with the internment in America of the Japanese during World War II. There’s a winning thought. I was wondering when he was going to get around to alienating Asian-Americans, the highest-earning, best-educated and fastest-growing racial group in the United States, according to Pew.

To review: He started with “the blacks,” through his smear campaign on the citizenship of the nation’s first African-American president. Moved on to Mexicans, war veterans, women who look less than flawless in middle age, the disabled, all Muslims and now people whose grandparents were rousted from their American homes and put in camps.

Which gets us back to his base and their awful bedfellows in the neo-Nazi bunkers. Who are these people? His supporters, most of them, do not see the shadow of the Reich when they look in the mirror. They are white, lower middle class, with little education beyond high school. The global economy has run them over. They don’t recognize their country. And they need a villain.

Trump has no solutions for the desperate angst of his followers. Tearing up trade agreements is not going to happen. Deporting workers who pick our fruit and hang sheetrock is not going to lift the fortunes of those who will no longer do those jobs. Barring all Muslims will not make us safer.

What he’s done is to give marginalized Americans permission to hate. He doesn’t use dog whistles or code. His bigotry is overt. But the table was set by years of dog whistles and code. The very “un-American” sentiment that Republican elders now claim to despise has been a mainstay of conservative media for at least a decade.

Yes, it’s encouraging that what is left of establishment Republicans have condemned Trump’s most odious idea yet. Sarah Palin, who stirred the resentment of “real Americans” against the nefarious Other when her party put her on the ticket in 2008, stands nearly alone in backing Trump’s call to bar entry into our country by adherents of the world’s second largest faith.

Still, it’s hard to take seriously House Speaker Paul Ryan’s rare objection to a lunatic suggestion from his party’s presidential front-runner when he says he would also back Trump should he be the nominee.

“It’s not our party,” lamented Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona. “It’s not our country.” As a Mormon, the senator has to be familiar with a time when there was an open war on his faith, when Mormons were considered not only un-American but domestic terrorists.

That history is instructive, as we struggle with Trump’s hysteria and the millions fired up by his hate. But the only way to get rid of the goose-steppers drawn to the G.O.P. is to vow to never support the man giving them something to march to.

timothy egan / nyt

58
Política e Economia Política / Re: Donald J. Trump
« em: 2015-12-11 22:37:06 »
What social science tells us about racism in the Republican party

Presidential candidate Donald Trump's proposal to bar all Muslims from entering the United States has reignited an old debate about the Republican Party, which some see as the party of intolerance.

Liberal critics have long insisted that Republican candidates use coded language that sounds respectable on its face but covertly signals an outdated view of race, ethnicity and religion to their constituents. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) voiced this perspective on Tuesday, saying that Trump's words and policies simply reveal the true values of the party and its supporters.

Some leading Republicans have rebuked Trump, distancing themselves and the party from his views.

"This is not conservatism. What was proposed yesterday is not what this party stands for," House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said a day after the presidential candidate proposed barring Muslims.

At the same time, other Republicans have been circumspect in their criticism of the party's presidential front-runner. Critics claim these GOP politicians are blowing a "dog whistle," inaudibly appealing to their constituents' prejudices.

The same argument has been applied to almost every recent presidential election: President Ronald Reagan was criticized for invoking the image of the welfare queen to imply that African Americans were lazy crooks who bilked the government. President George H.W. Bush's infamous Willie Horton spot told the story of a black man who committed violent crimes while on furlough from prison, a move that critics say won Bush supporters by exploiting white Americans' fear of black crime.

An expanding body of research by psychologists, economists and political scientists suggests that voters' racial biases help the GOP win elections, and critics say the party is capitalizing on that fact. Though researchers haven't settled how successful dog-whistle politics are at tapping into those prejudices, some believe that race will become more, not less important in the party's future campaigns.

"There's a good deal of evidence that white resentment of minorities is linked to support for Republican candidates, their policies and conservative ideology in America," said Robb Willer, a political psychologist at Stanford University.

On the campaign trail, reporters frequently bring up Trump's rhetoric and ask the other candidates to make their positions clear at a time when white Americans are a rapidly declining portion of the population. Bruce Bartlett, who served as a senior economic official under Reagan and George H.W. Bush but now describes himself as independent, said Trump is giving Republicans a crucial opportunity to win over a larger, more diverse electorate by repudiating prejudice.

"Trump is forcing Republicans, at long long last, to finally decide, 'Are we going to be the party of racism and lose the White House forever?' " Bartlett said.

Racial biases

As the country has become more diverse, the Democratic Party has, too. But the demographics of the Republican Party have not changed much in recent years, according to Gallup. As of 2012, 89 percent Republicans were non-Hispanic whites, compared to 60 percent of Democrats. Nearly three quarters of Hispanic and Asian voters and fully 93 percent of black voters cast ballots in favor of President Obama in 2012, according to Washington Post exit polls.

Research has shown that voters who favor Republicans are more likely to hold racial biases against people of color. For instance, nearly one in five Republicans opposes interracial dating, compared to just one in 20 Democrats, according to the Pew Research Center.



A poll conducted by the Associated Press before the 2012 election found that 79 percent of Republicans agreed with negative statements about racial minorities, such as "If blacks would only try harder, they could be just as well off as whites." Among Democrats, the figure was just 32 percent.

The Republican National Committee did not respond on the record to inquiries about Reid's statement.

'The white man's party'

The data is all the more surprising at first blush since Democrats were the party of segregation in Southern states for decades. That began to change in 1963.

On June 11 of that year, President John Kennedy, a Democrat, gave a televised speech in favor of racial equality. That spring, the share of white Southerners who approved of Kennedy declined by a precipitous 35 percentage points.

Some Republicans saw an opportunity. By emphasizing their support for "states' rights" and "law and order," they could subtly appeal to those disaffected white voters, showing their support for the status quo without explicitly opposing civil rights.

"Substantial numbers of Party leaders from both North and South see rich political dividends flowing from the Negrophobia of many white Americans," wrote journalists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak, both well sourced in conservative circles, two weeks after Kennedy's speech. "These Republicans want to unmistakably establish the Party of Lincoln as the white man's party."

Over the next few decades, white support for Democrats in the South — once monolithic — gradually eroded.

Bartlett, the former Reagan administration official, argued that white Southerners did not leave the party because of racial bias. He said these voters held conservative positions on issues unrelated to race, such as health care and Soviet relations. That group gradually realized the Republican platform matched their views more closely.

On the other hand, a new paper by economists Ilyana Kuziemko and Ebonya Washington rebuts alternative explanations for the decline in the number of Southern white Democrats. Analyzing archival polls, the authors found no evidence that racially conservative white Democrats who left the party were more conservative on issues unrelated to race than those who stayed in the party. The only explanation for their desertion of the Democratic Party that was consistent with the data was racial animosity and opposition to civil rights.

Southern strategy

While some leading Republicans have tried to put this history behind them, there's reason to think the problem of prejudice will return with a vengeance in this campaign and in subsequent elections.

Maureen Craig and Jennifer Anne Richeson, psychologists at Northwestern University, recently conducted an experiment in which participants read about the fact that white residents are no longer the majority of California's population. Reading this information made white participants more likely to support the Republican Party and more likely to endorse conservative views in a questionnaire.

Given that white Americans' share of the population is declining in many other states, too, white voters could be swayed by candidates who talk about race, openly or not.

"Race is inevitably going to become a more and more important part of Republican strategy as it becomes more and more a party of whites and especially white men," said Eric Knowles, a political psychologist at New York University. "Demographically, that's where their base is."

Knowles's research suggests that this trend has already begun to affect GOP politics. Using data from a series of surveys, he and his colleagues found that membership in the tea party increased respondents' perceptions of white identity over time. Other researchers have found that its members tend to be more racist and xenophobic, after accounting for their belief in limited government and other conservative principles.

In other words, there are many Americans with conservative views, but those who also hold prejudices against foreigners and people of color were more likely to join the tea party.

"The shift we're seeing right now in politics is really an unselfconscious and unabashed reintroduction of racial interest and racial rhetoric in campaigns," Knowles said.

'Dog whistle'

Those tea party studies were conducted nearly five years ago, and data from the current campaign isn't yet available. To some observers, though, the Republican field's rhetoric fits a familiar pattern.

Trump is "the walking id of the Republican base, and maybe of the American people, too," Knowles said.

The real-estate magnate's proposal to bar all Muslims from entering the United States is a grandiose example, but his contenders are employing similar tactics.

Though Jeb Bush called Trump "unhinged," he also has said he believes that assistance for Syrian refugees should be directed toward Christians. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) agreed. "There is no meaningful risk of Christians committing acts of terror," he said last month.

In response to Trump's plan to ban Muslims from entering the country, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said this week, "I've called for something similar." Paul said he opposed a test for immigrants based explicitly on religion, but added that screening immigrants based on the risk they posed to national security would accomplish the same goal.

Neurosurgeon Ben Carson has also suggested that Muslims might be dangerous, comparing the predominately Muslim Syrian refugees to dogs.

"If there's a rabid dog running around in your neighborhood, you're probably not going to assume something good about that dog," Carson said last month. "It doesn't mean you hate all dogs, but you're putting your intellect into motion." He has also said he does not think that a Muslim should be allowed to become president of the United States.

As for Trump, the one issue that appears to unite his supporters is opposition to immigrants. A majority of Republicans who support the deportation of undocumented immigrants and oppose accepting refugees from Syria also support Trump.


 
Some politicians and pundits have called Trump a fascist and a demagogue, but the term wrongly suggests that his approach is radically different from that of other Republican candidates, said Ian Haney-López, a legal scholar at the University of California, Berkeley.

"These sorts of terms make Trump seem as if he's this exceptional unique outlier, that he's doing something that nobody else has done," said Haney-López.

"Clearly, in some ways he's different from other politicians," Haney-López said, "but in his strategic decision to pursue support, to mobilize support by appealing to people's racial fears, he's well within the tradition that has been established in the Republican Party since roughly 1963."

Max Ehrenfreund/Wonkblog/WaPo

59
Política e Economia Política / Re: O Medo
« em: 2015-12-11 22:11:01 »
e o que me chateia é que eu que não tenho essas fobias, tenho que suportar os efeitos das fobias dos outros.
isso é que me chateia.

L

o ocidente está a entrar numa espiral fóbica, e por causa dela a limitar drasticamente as liberdades individuais.
não estou a falar das dos refugiados ou imigrantes. as minhas!

por causa dos fóbicos, dos irracionais, tudo o que é comunicação electrónica em breve será vigiado, as despesas em vigilância e em segurança vão aumentar exponencialmente, as guerras tornam-se mais prováveis, e eu que não tenho essas fobias sou obrigado a pagar guerras, vigilâncias, segurança aumentada e o meu direito à privacidade desaparece.

tenho impressão que se vai ter que tratar das fobias de outra maneira.
até porque não há mais fóbicos que não fóbicos. é uma minoria a impôr uma série de limitações e custos escusados, à sociedade em geral.
isso tem que levar uma volta.

cada um tem direito às suas fobias. a ter as fobias que quiser.
não tem direito de as impôr aos outros.

a sociedade em geral não tem que pagar os desequilíbrios emocionais de uma minoria.

L

Exacto, a falta de resposta efectiva aos problemas leva ao que descreves.

Daí que sejam necessárias respostas efectivas para lidar com o aumento de risco, em vez de se o mitigar crescentemente via cortes da liberdade. Nota que os cortes da liberdade vêm do risco acrescido (que é um facto), não das respostas duras à fonte do problema.

Por exemplo, quando uma mulher muda os seus hábitos de vestir, está a ver uma restrição à sua liberdade apenas porque não existe um lidar efectivo com o risco que a faz mudar forçadamente esses hábitos.

pois, mas não vai ser por aí.
deixar que as democracias ocidentais caiam numa sociedade orwelliana por meia duzia de teoria descabeladas e outras tantas donzelas histéricas, não pode ser.
e não vai ser.
os millenials e o seus filhos, nunca irão nisso.

resta saber como é que se vai combater isto.
para já é combater as restrições às liberdades e as pseudo-razões - as racionalizações da fobia - para as restrições às liberdades.

a única forma que estou a ver para o fazer é mesmo combater directamente as restrições objectivas à liberdade e ignorar pura e simplesmente as racionalizações fóbicas.

a vasta maioria não fóbica não se pode submeter sem luta, aos resultados do pânico de um punhado de assustadiços.

L


60
Política e Economia Política / Re: O Medo
« em: 2015-12-11 21:08:07 »
e o que me chateia é que eu que não tenho essas fobias, tenho que suportar os efeitos das fobias dos outros.
isso é que me chateia.

L

o ocidente está a entrar numa espiral fóbica, e por causa dela a limitar drasticamente as liberdades individuais.
não estou a falar das dos refugiados ou imigrantes. as minhas!

por causa dos fóbicos, dos irracionais, tudo o que é comunicação electrónica em breve será vigiado, as despesas em vigilância e em segurança vão aumentar exponencialmente, as guerras tornam-se mais prováveis, e eu que não tenho essas fobias sou obrigado a pagar guerras, vigilâncias, segurança aumentada e o meu direito à privacidade desaparece.

tenho impressão que se vai ter que tratar das fobias de outra maneira.
até porque não há mais fóbicos que não fóbicos. é uma minoria a impôr uma série de limitações e custos escusados, à sociedade em geral.
isso tem que levar uma volta.

cada um tem direito às suas fobias. a ter as fobias que quiser.
não tem direito de as impôr aos outros.

a sociedade em geral não tem que pagar os desequilíbrios emocionais de uma minoria.

L

Páginas: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 232