Thursday, December 31, 2020
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Thursday, December 24, 2020
To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Tenet - Movie Review
Tenet is simply an amazing film with some of the deepest mysteries of a well-rounded post-credit wrap. Lower ratings for the film’s criticism of “more than high confusion” show the audience that they were simply simple ideas that made no sense.
POST COVID SCENARIOS
Where will we be in six months, a year, ten years from now? I lie awake at night wondering what the future holds for my loved ones. My friends and relatives are in danger. I wonder what will happen to my job, even though I am more fortunate than most: I get a good salary and am able to work far away. I am writing this from the United Kingdom, where I still have self-employed friends who look down on the unpaid months, friends who have lost their jobs. The contract that pays 80% of my salary expires in December. Coronavirus is hitting the economy hard. Is there anyone to hire when I need a job?
The response to the Covid-19 epidemic is simply to magnify the dynamic forces that trigger other social and environmental issues: the prioritization of one type of value over others. These impacts have played a major role in driving global response to the epidemic. So as the virus response changes, how can our economic future grow?
From an economic point of view, there are four future prospects: a crisis, a strong capitalist state, a tense socialist state, and a transformation into a socially constructed society. Versions for all of this tomorrow will happen perfectly, if not equally appealing.
Small changes
Coronavirus, like climate change, is in part a problem for our economic structure. Although both are seen as "natural" or "natural" problems, they are driven by society.
Dealing with both Covid-19 and climate change is much easier if you reduce non-essential economic activities. In climate change this is because when you produce less material, you use less energy, and you emit fewer greenhouse gases. The epidemiology of Covid-19 is changing rapidly. But the basic idea is just as simple. People congregate and spread diseases. This happens in homes, in the workplace, and in the travels of people. Reducing these interactions is likely to reduce person-to-person transfers and lead to a number of general conditions.
We can see from Wuhan that measures of public and private restraint such measures are effective. The political economy is helping to help us understand why they were not previously informed in European and US countries.
FALL OF ECONOMY
Lockdown puts pressure on the global economy. We are facing a severe recession. This pressure has led some world leaders to call for a reduction in the ban. Although 19 countries are living in a closed zone, US President Donald Trump and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro have called for a reversal of mitigation measures. Trump has called for the American economy to return to normal in three weeks - now accepting that social turmoil will need to be maintained for a long time. Bolsonaro said: “Our lives must go on. Tasks must be saved ... We must, yes, return to normal. ”
Meanwhile in the United Kingdom, four days before calling for a three-week closure, Prime Minister Boris Johnson had little hope, saying the UK could change the practice within 12 weeks. But even if Johnson is right, it remains the case that we are living with an economic system that will threaten to collapse with the next sign of the epidemic.
Fall economies are straightforward. Businesses are there to make a profit. If they can't produce, they can't sell things. This means they can't make a profit, which means they can't hire you. Businesses can and do - in the short term - hold on to workers they don’t need immediately: they want to be able to meet the needs when the economy recovers. However, if things start to look really bad, you won't. As a result, many people lose their jobs or fear losing their jobs. So they bought a little. And the whole cycle starts again, and we grow into economic depression.

