Open Thread - Friday, November 13, 2015

Hey, it's Friday the 13th! We all have bad luck and trouble is on the horizon.

I am a tail end boomer and have been relatively fortunate. That was then, this is now.

30 Facts That Prove The American Middle-Class Is Being Destroyed

The 30 statistics that you are about to read prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the middle class in America is being systematically destroyed. Once upon a time, the United States had the largest and most prosperous middle class in the history of the world, but now that is changing at a staggering pace. Yes, the stock market has soared to unprecedented heights this year and there are a few isolated areas of the country that are doing rather well for the moment. But overall, the long-term trends that are eviscerating the middle class just continue to accelerate.

Our political class is too busy creating divisions and blaming the victims.

Thom Hartmann: How America Killed Its Middle Class

There's nothing "normal" about having a middle class. Having a middle class is a choice that a society has to make, and it's a choice we need to make again in this generation, if we want to stop the destruction of the remnants of the last generation's middle class.

How Pursuing “Competitiveness” Crushes Labor and Lowers Growth

The accusation comes across loud and clear whenever politicians or business people talk about ‘competitiveness’. Anyone who does not back their strategies threatens to damage the economy: forcing it to operate beneath its potential level of output leading to unnecessary pain and misery, as lower levels of production lead to higher joblessness. There is currently little political space beyond this particular equation of competitiveness and growth, where if you raise even a circumspect eyebrow in relation to the modern-day Competitiveness Agenda you are depicted as an economic devil, talking down your country’s growth opportunities.

Personally, I am checking out of the rat race. I am tired and angry.

Martin Wolf on the Low Labor Participation as the Result of the Crapification of Jobs

The Financial Times’ Martin Wolf today pointed to the flagging US labor participation rate as a sign that all is not well with the US economy:

In 2014, 12 per cent — close to one in eight — of US men between the ages of 25 and 54 were neither in work nor looking for it. This was very close to the Italian ratio and far higher than in other members of the group of seven leading high-income countries: in the UK, it was 8 per cent; in Germany and France 7 per cent; and in Japan a mere 4 per cent.

In the same year, the proportion of US prime-age women neither in work nor looking for it was 26 per cent, much the same as in Japan and less only than Italy’s. US labour market performance was strikingly poor for the men and women whose responsibilities should make earning a good income vital…

They can't make me play their game.

Hillary Clinton Indicates She is Open to Raising the Retirement Age

Yves here. One of the things that is troubling about Clinton’s hinting at the idea of raising retirement age is that this is occurring when gains in lifespan in the US have stalled out. And with diabetes only becoming more prevalent and having a negative impact on life expectancy, it’s not out of the question that lifespans in the US could even fall. As Alan Grayson said, ” If you get sick, America, the Republican health care plan is this: ‘Die quickly.'” The problem is it’s not clear that the Democrats have a viable alternative….although as Lambert points out there is countervailing pressure from the medical industrial complex, which is very fond of the “insert tube, extract rents” model.

Is the U.S. a Fascist Society? Fascism is a Political Economic Structure Which Serves Corporate Interests

Most Americans are taught in school that fascism is a ruthless one party dictatorship, the most popular example being Nazi Germany. This is a misconception. Fascism is a political economy, not merely a political system that existed in one moment of history. Fascism, as defined by Black revolutionary and assassinated political prisoner George Jackson, is the complete control of the state by monopoly capital. Fascism is the last stage of capitalism in the heart of the US imperial center where the relationship between the state and corporation becomes indiscernible. A difficult, but necessary, task for the left in this period is to acknowledge that fascism is the system of rule in the United States.

The privatization of the public sector, de-unionization of the entire labor force, and violent austerity are the seeds of domestically grown fascism in the economic realm. Such fascist activity has brought about the rapid decline of political and economic conditions for the working class and the rapid accumulation of wealth and profit for the ruling class. Workers are doing more and more on the job for less and less pay. The jobless are either searching desperately for work or not searching at all. Shelters are overflowing and turning the homeless away. The US has 25 percent of the world’s prisoners despite only possessing 5 percent of the world’s population. Mass joblessness, poverty, imprisonment, and homelessness are material forces that breed fear and competition amongst the working class.

“Fascism is rising in America”: The Koch brothers and democracy’s dispiriting demise

As the American Heritage Dictionary noted, fascism is: “A system of government that exercises a dictatorship of the extreme right, typically through the merging of state and business leadership, together with belligerent nationalism.”

Well, it it may well on our doorstep. And the oligarchs are plotting their final takeover by using their economic dominance to capture governmental power – specifically, the governmental power which sets the rules for the very marketplace that provides the oligarchs with such massive wealth.

Once the American corporate barons own the institutions that are meant to regulate them, it’s game-over for both rational capitalism (including competition) and for democracy.

Good luck out there!

Peace and Love,

Tim

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gulfgal98's picture

I worked my entire career (with the exception of one year) in local government. Back in the 1990's, governments got on the competitiveness bandwagon too. We were given materials that talked about the new paradigm for work and how we needed to be competitive. We had extensive training indoctrination into this paradigm of competitiveness and our evaluations were geared toward competing with one another with any raises tied to those evaluations. I distinctly remember the day as the new competitive philosophy was being introduced, that our department head told all of us that no one was indispensable and that everyone was expendable.

The result was a massive change in the working environment from one of cooperation to one of competition. The quality of our work went down and moral plummented. At the same time, the worst supervisor I ever had was hired. He prohibited us professionals from working cooperatively or helping one another on projects. Inter-division cooperation became non-existent. I specifically remember being assigned to work with a planner in another division on a project. I completed my draft first and gave it to her to review before we submitted our final work. I asked that she share her work with me too so that we could be sure that both parts of the project were cohesive. I had two decades of experience and seniority over her. Instead, she submitted both her work and mine without sharing the final product with me first. When I asked her why, her response was that I was not her supervisor and she did not have to share her work with me.

In using the competitive evaluation scoring system for giving raises, my new evil supervisor decided what the final scores would be first before actually evaluating us. He wanted to downgrade the longest term planners in the division in hopes that we would leave to go elsewhere. Two of the five planners in our division did just that. I had the most seniority, so he wanted to give me the lowest score even though I was the highest rated planner for several years under the previous division chief. The problem was that his individual scores did not add up to the total. My biggest downgrade was for having worked there too long. (yes, true)

Having worked under a system in which employees were valued and treated professionally and fairly versus the one (under which I ended up retiring from) in which we were treated as interchangeable and competitive cogs, there was no doubt in my mind that competitiveness leads to overall poorer performance, employee burnout, and lack of cooperation in the work environment.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

NCTim's picture

First came the KPIs, key performance indicators, then we had a portion of our compensation "deferred". The deferred portion was held back and prorated against company performance versus the goals. We had an MBA manager who would give us "stretch goals". Stretch goals were basically unattainable, meaning a portion of your compensation was absorbed by the business unit.

I managed a service providing group. We were customer facing and made things work. My primary measurement was, employee makes my job easier = good, employee makes my job harder = bad. We had a meeting with the corporate toadies, known as HR, and were trained on how to set goals and measure employees. All measurements had to be empirical with the thresholds for 1-5 ratings. During the meeting I said, "Why don't we just put the reviews on an Excel spreadsheet and email them to the employees?". I got a one on one meeting with the VP for my comment.

I managed an application engineering group that was a stand alone P&L. We were implementing instrumentation for semiconductor implant chambers during the time frame when 300 mm wafer plants were being built. We were growing 20% a year and making ~40% profit margin. I gave my entire group (6 people), meets+ (4) or exceeds (5) ratings. The compensation budget was a straight multiplier. In other words, if the number is 3%, the business unit compensation time 1.03 is the next year's compensation budget. Individual compensation is a multiplier determined by a market target compensation and the individual's performance rating. My entire department got merit increases a couple of percentage points higher than the baseline. There were several other P&Ls that did things like cranes, electrical substations, pumping applications, automotive powertrain and stamping presses. The VP and HR manager called each of the P&L managers and instructed us to change employees reviews to lower the compensation budget. The P&L managers were not aware that each of us received the same phone call. I had decided that I would not change employee ratings unless the direction was written. During the next quarterly staff meeting, I asked the other managers about the phone call. All of the other managers had received the call and had complied.

Best listened to on 11 ->

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

NCTim's picture

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

NCTim's picture

Funk Friday ... with bling.

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

For those who despair the loss of critical thinking, BlackCatte recently posted an excellent piece on just this topic at OffGuardian: "The idiotic media version of ISIS: are we losing our critical thinking?"

It's a long-form essay, well-written, entertaining, and ultimately challenging. I highly recommend it.

http://off-guardian.org/2015/11/07/the-idiotic-media-version-of-isis-are...

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Only connect. - E.M. Forster

NCTim's picture

... with ALEC's help, have outlawed critical thinking.

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

mimi's picture

1. what is the meaning of a snuff video?
2. where do you put the VICE news services and videos in this szenario?
3. Aren't a couple of outlets at least to a degree part of that as well? RT? AlJazeera?
4. If it's not anymore distinguishable to what is fact and what is fiction, why should we watch all of it?
5. Isn't watching all of it what most of us do?
6. Where do we stand in it?

That's why I like books with a couple of pictures from times when photoshop and fine video editing technology was still in its infancy.

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mimi's picture

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Pluto's Republic's picture

It is not so much America's international murder sprees, as heinous as they are, that has caused the growing global disrespect toward the US — it is the way the US denies its people the most critical of Human Rights. Specifically, health care.

"There, but for the grace of God go I," international onlookers think to themselves. It is this, above all, that stands as a barrier to the sweeping US trade agreements — the TPP and the TTIP — because the trade agreements are deliberately designed to harm national health care systems by making medications increasingly unaffordable in all participating nations, including the US. Some nations have opted out of this depravity via side agreements, but most have not.

But back to the current disgrace in the US — on display to the world — Amy Goodman investigates:

How GOP & Insurers Undercut Obamacare's Nonprofit Option

It’s the kind of scenario that advocates of a single-payer system warned about from the outset: With Obamacare relying on for-profit insurance companies to provide coverage, the market will find a way to squeeze out those who need it most.

The insurance co-ops were founded to offer a cheaper alternative after Democrats stopped demanding a public option. But since going live three years ago, the co-ops have faced major cutbacks from the Republican-controlled Congress. The GOP has slashed funding by more than half and stopped the Obama administration from helping offset the unexpected high costs of covering sicker beneficiaries.

Goodman interviews three well known health care experts, including Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, a New York, primary care physician, professor at the CUNY School of Public Health at Hunter College, co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, where she’s been a vocal advocate for single payer. Here's an excerpt:

AMY GOODMAN: Steffie Woolhandler, let’s begin with you. In New York, there are well over 200,000 people who are—have insurance under what’s called Health Republic, one of these healthcare co-ops. Suddenly, last Friday, to the shock of many—even people working within the system—they were told that this healthcare co-op will close by the end of the month. That’s November. That’s before you can even get coverage in this open enrollment period. The next time is January 1st. So they have to sign up twice—right now, to fill the gap to the end of December, and then, because of IT issues—they can’t just sign up now and get that insurance from now on in another company—they have to sign up now ’til the end of December, and sign up within the open enrollment period, like a day later, for getting insurance in January. Over 200,000 people are out of insurance.

DR. STEFFIE WOOLHANDLER: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: Just in New York alone.

DR. STEFFIE WOOLHANDLER: Just in New York. And 10 of the 23 co-ops have closed, and several more are expected to close soon. These nonprofit co-ops, many of us felt they were never going to be viable. These tiny insurance co-ops was like the peewee football going against the NFL. They just didn’t have the size to make it in the marketplace.

But also, they weren’t cheaters. And the way the health insurance market works is good guys finish last, and cheaters win. The way you make a killing in the health insurance market is by signing up lots of healthy people, collecting as high premiums as possible and giving them as little care as possible—and, if they get sick, figuring out ways to force them out of the insurance. That’s the way the U.S. insurance market works. And these small nonprofit co-ops were not very good at playing the game. Many of them didn’t want to play that game.

So, we’re not surprised they went under. You know, the only way to insure a population, that has worked, is through some form of nonprofit national health insurance. That’s what every other developed nation uses. And then you have everybody in what we call the same risk pool—everyone in, nobody out.

http://www.democracynow.org/2015/11/3/the_co_ops_collapse_how_gop

It's a telling interview, and leaves little wonder about the growing contempt that the world has for the psychopathic policies of United States that denies basic Human Rights to its citizens for the sake of profits for the corporations that own the nation.

No developed or emerging nation has stooped this low in either the Western or Eastern Hemispheres.

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NCTim's picture

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

Pluto's Republic's picture

I wish I could put that video on a business card. It describes perfectly most of the writing gigs I am engaged in.

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Every time I see his lying, smarmy face grinning at me, I'd like to smack it. I really don't understand why we don't have strikes going on all over the globe.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

for reading what I mean instead of what I type. Give rose

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

gulfgal98's picture

I despise so many things about him and how he lied to this country. But most of all I despise how he has sold out his most loyal supporters, the poor and people of color.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

mimi's picture

I have my son at the phone and he is basically telling me that he believes in nothing anymore with regards to caring of employers for the fate of their employees and general empathy of people, driven away from it by greed. We then talk about the differences between US and Germany/Europe and with all the tourists hanging around in places like Hawaii from Europe, hanging there without working, but somehow still surviving, telling him they have difficulties to find the jobs over there. So it looks to him as if the situations here and over there are comparable. I don't believe it but, he doesn't believe me.

So, we are caught up in life constantly comparing things and I am tired of it. I think I hang on to the old memories of work and educational situations in Europe of the sixties and seventies and have lost the capability to have my own reality-based opinion of what goes on in Europe, and I also have lost (or never gained) the capability to have a fair reality-based opinion about what was going on in the US in the eighties until now and how it changed over time. (learning it only through reading online), because I never recovered from culture shocks I went through in my life, which were not only US - Europe differences, but more than that.

Half of what NCTim describes in his comment I can't even understand, because of the professional, technical lingo, but it sounds absolutely awful and I can't believe that what the employers do is legal.

Reading gulfgal's comment, I just remember when I - (never worked in any US governmental positition - not accessible to me as green card holder - and never in an US-based corporation (wouldn't qualify for anything with my foreign out of date education and in my age - worked only shortly in an academic settings) - when I for the first time thought that people in the US compete for EVERYTHING and kill themselves for the sake of being competitive. They even compete for the most painful victim status.

I don't know how I survived after I walked out of my former marriage, but I ended up only working for German media or German think tank related lower level assistant kind of jobs, the only ones I seem to be able to get. The jobs I had felt safe. They had no upward routes. I didn't care, I was glad to earn by daily bread so to speak and I was not scared to lose them.

This depressive attitude my son represents, which to a lesser degree, he sees in his friends and Veteran buddies from the military, is prevalent everywhere around. Nobody believes anymore to hold jobs long term giving them security to build their lives, everybody seems to be very pissed off with their student loans they had to take, often they are pissed off with WHAT they actual got taught in college. People loosing their homes left and right, people look out for "warm climate" because they don't want to get into shelter situations during winter times and rather try to survive in areas, where they wouldn't freeze. I think that's pretty crazy, because men have always adapted to any climate.

I mean, I don't know, if the depressions of my son fog my views - (and I have a hard time to get away from them and distance myself to not get hung up in them), but almost everything upsets me about the situations he describes to me and the ones I read about online or see around here in the wider DC and MD area. So, what I learn from here and from other online sites, is enhancing the depressive views and in that sense is not helpful.

The worst is that I also have had myself and still have a lot of doubts about the value of the education you can obtain in colleges (especially for the price you have to pay for it) that all you want to do is to educate yourself by yourself, which I think shouldn't be an acceptable outcome of the situational downward spiral the US middle class is in.

WTF, thanks, NCTim for your excellent OT and the tunes (love me my BBKing). Let's start playing another game, not "their's". It's time to go on, but resent.

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NCTim's picture

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

mimi's picture

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link

Eight months after launching a war in Yemen, Saudi Arabia appears trapped in a protracted and devastating conflict that is straining relations with its allies, intensifying internal power struggles and emboldening its regional rival, Iran, analysts say.

Since March, the key U.S. ally has led a coalition of mostly Gulf Arab countries and Yemeni fighters in a military campaign to drive out Iranian-aligned rebels who seized the capital, Sanaa, and swaths of the Arabian Peninsula country.

But the coalition appears increasingly hobbled by divisions and unable to find a face-saving way to end the costly conflict.

The rebels, known as Houthis, still control much of Yemen’s north. And in southern areas where the coalition has driven them out, lawlessness has spread as attacks linked to an Islamic State affiliate wreak havoc.

“This war is draining the Saudis militarily, politically, strategically,” said Farea al-Muslimi, a Yemen analyst at the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center.

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Counterpunch

The insurgents are losing . . . and they’re desperate.
— General John F Campbell, senior foreign commander in Afghanistan, speech in Kabul on December 28, 2014

The security situation in Afghanistan is extremely unstable, and the threat to all U.S. citizens in Afghanistan remains critical. . . Militant attacks throughout the country continue, with many of these attacks specifically targeting U.S. and other foreign citizens and entities . . . Extremists associated with various Taliban networks and members of other armed opposition groups are active in every province of the country.
— Current US State Department travel advisory for Afghanistan

In Afghanistan on December 28 last year there was a large military ceremony in Kabul. It marked replacement of the US-NATO led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) combat mission by a NATO “training and support” organization called Resolute Support. It was the most significant military-political event in the country since President George W Bush ordered his military forces to attack Afghanistan on October 7, 2001.

The senior figure at the ceremony was US Army General John F Campbell, commander of all foreign forces in Afghanistan, who declared to those present that “we have lifted the Afghan people out of the darkness of despair and given them hope for the future. You’ve made Afghanistan stronger and our countries safer.”

He ignored the staggering irony of the fact that for his own safety he could not give his speech in an open forum. There was no possibility that this US General could appear in a location accessible to the public anywhere in Afghanistan. As recorded by Fox News “the ceremony had to be organized in secret due to the threat of a Taliban attack, the number and intensity of which have increased in recent months,” which is hardly an indication of a “stronger” Afghanistan.
...
The US State Department’s ‘Travel Warning’ notes that “the security situation in Afghanistan is extremely unstable, and the threat to all US citizens remains critical.” That’s clear enough — and it sums up the entire horrible charade in Afghanistan. The country is a deeply corrupt, politically incoherent, economically insolvent, insurgent-ridden shambles that leads the world in production of heroin. As Al Jazeera notes, “Not only is Afghanistan the global leader in opium production, but Afghans are now the leading consumers of their own drugs. The number of Afghan drug addicts now stands at nearly three million, up from less than 500,000 just two years ago.” According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime’s 2014 Afghan Opium Survey, in 2001 there was opium poppy cultivation over 8,000 hectares (20,000 acres) and by 2014 it had exploded to 224,000 hectares.

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With the iron fist of "capitalism".

linnk

Fund managers say regulators have been telling them what they like and don’t like via warning letters from stock exchanges to brokers. Piling on buy orders when stocks are rising is bad. Dumping shares when the market is tanking also gets a warning.
Short selling—selling borrowed securities in a bet on falling markets or simply to hedge against other bets—is now frowned upon. Sidney Yu, a hedge-fund manager in Shanghai, said he hasn’t been trading in recent months. “I don’t want to get arrested,” said Mr. Yu, who manages the equivalent of about $188 million in assets. “It has become very expensive to short the market, even just for hedging purposes,” Mr. Yu said

link

“The authorities have arrested a lot of people, but we still don’t have a clear picture regarding the real reasons behind it. Sometimes we just tell ourselves that we don’t really need to know the truth, as long as the market goes up.”
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divineorder's picture

Let me share that the main reason we have been 'scarce around these parts' is that for the last 3 months we have been in three different times zones all of which are 5 to 7 hours different than US?

'We have not been visiting often, but when we do' --the navigation is, for us, very slow to the point of maybe unconsciously avoiding visiting?

But hey, since this is an open thread, wonder if I could ask some user questions c99% that have been percolating in mah brain for a while? We like the content, we both really like finding that the 'usual suspects' hang out here.

Here goes:

1. Slowwwwwwwwwwww.
This is true on both my Android Galaxy 4 with Firefox, and Dell laptop with Windows 8 and Firefox.
Both here in Italy on a 4G connection and back in NM/TX in July on 4GLTE before we left, everything seems to operate in molasses.

Could this be Firefox and all the antispyware/anti-virus/malware add on I have?

Really, seems, at times, whether its to post a comment or follow links like I am operating via dial up. Very frustrating, because though I will probably never totally quit DK-- after all Meteor Blades still posts there -- I followed you fine people on over here for the community of cool kids and misfits (me) and for the news of EB.

2. Whodat rec my comments, man?
Hate to admit it, but I REALLY like to know who is reccing my comments and the comments of others. Does that make me paranoid or neurotic, just really interested in what you all think?

Appreciate any feedback or info.

Keep up the great work, all.

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

but then, we'd have dkos software. I do not have a problem with it being slow. It isn't as fast as some, but it is ok. I am running Windows 10, Norton and Chrome. My ISP is my cable company, and I have the middle package. JtC can probably tell you lots more.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

gulfgal98's picture

I run Firefox on my laptop here in NC and have no problems with the speed.

As far as who recs the comments, early on there was some discussion about the issue you raised. If I remember correctly, the decision not to show who rec'd the comments was a purposeful one. Hopefully, JtC can clarify.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

I haven't notice any major slowdowns, every once in a while it will hang for a few seconds, probably because there's a program running in the background, namely the Cron program that triggers events and log ins. When you get back stateside if it still runs slow, let us know. We'll be doing some updating and tweaking this winter, probably January and February.

When the site first went live we had a big discussion about the reccing feature and it was pretty much consensus that folks liked it better as anonymous voting. Besides, I tried and AFAIK it's not possible to display who recced on this platform. If enough people would like that change I can look into it further though.

Thanks for the queries do and thanks for hanging with us. Say hi to jb for us.

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divineorder's picture

In the US willinng to blame Verizon for time of day slow downs, or my own setup of Spyware hardware combo. Both this site an Daily kosher freeze up on me. So not at all sure it has anything to do with this site. Funny right now this minute on my mobile he r tee 8n Italy it is working very fast.

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

the large amount of youtubes doing it. I run the NoScript extension and block the youtubes from loading most of the time, but when I allow the youtubes to load the essays with lots of tubes can take a long time to load. Try disabling flash in your device and see if that helps.

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