It was this one:

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22029382.400-the-maths-that-saw-the-us-shutdown-coming.html#.Uo6MecSVPB4




On 22 November 2013 11:39, Richard Ruquist <yann...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I stopped my NS subscription last year.
> Do you recall anything I can Google?
> I'll try 'the mathematics of crashes'
> Yes. That works:
>
> http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21228354.500-revealed--the-capitalist-network-that-runs-the-world.html#.Uo6HTNK-qFA
>
> But this may be better:
> http://www.theguardian.com/science/2012/feb/12/black-scholes-equation-credit-crunch
> or
> http://fivebooks.com/interviews/james-owen-weatherall-on-physics-and-financial-markets
>
>
> But none seem to support or be concerned with the gist of my post that in
> your words
> (I suspect that there may be some truth to your statement)
> "the capitalist system would work fine if it wasn't for the rich".
> They are just too greedy for their own good.
> Richard
>
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 21, 2013 at 5:10 PM, LizR <lizj...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi Richard,
>>
>> There was an article in New Scientist recently about a mathematician who
>> claims to have a theory which says roughly what you are saying - do you
>> know anything about that? It sounds a bit like "the railways would run on
>> time if it wasn't for the passengers!" -- or in this case,  "the capitalist
>> system would work fine if it wasn't for the rich" :)
>>
>>
>> On 22 November 2013 10:53, Richard Ruquist <yann...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Bruno,
>>>
>>> The rich have been trying to take over the US govt to reduce their tax
>>> burden for over 100 years.
>>>
>>>
>>> Every time they have succeeded the result has been an economic crash
>>> usually followed by war.
>>>
>>> That happened in 1857 after a decade of prosperity and then the crash
>>> was followed by the Civil War within a decade.
>>>
>>>
>>> Crash and Clash was repeated in 1893->WWI,
>>>
>>> and again in the real estate crash of 1926 and the Wall Street crash of
>>> 1929->WWII.
>>>
>>>
>>> In each case the very rich accumulated so much wealth that they caused
>>> investment/debt bubbles resulting a crash. After the real estate crash of
>>> 1926, rich investors then switched to stocks and caused the 1929 crash.  We
>>> have already experienced a real estate crash in 2008. and today we see
>>> the stock exchange reaching never before heights.
>>>
>>> So we again are ripe for a crash which and if the lessons of the 1920s
>>> are repeated,
>>>
>>> the crash will be much more severe than the 2008 Great Recession.
>>>
>>>
>>> The roaring 20s prosperity came about when the top tax rate was reduced
>>> to 25% along with finance deregulation. Since WWII and up to Reagan,
>>> the top tax rates were between 90% and 70%, and at those rates the rich
>>> tended to turn profits back into their companies and the recessions were
>>> rather mild. But after Reagan reduced the top rates to 28%, the incentive
>>> to accumulate wealth was strong resulting in a series of investment
>>> bubbles. Recall the internet bubble at the turn of the century. And
>>> deregulation resulted in the invention of derivatives.
>>>
>>>
>>> So I think, and many bankers do as they are hoarding cash, that we are
>>> headed for a serious stock market crash, and apparently just because the
>>> very rich are making so much money, especially in derivatives which
>>> continue to exist despite being the cause of the real estate crash. It is
>>> said that the value of the derivative debt is orders of magnitude bigger
>>> than the value of the entire world.
>>>
>>>
>>> That sounds like a form of comp (;<)
>>>
>>>
>>> Richard
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Nov 21, 2013 at 10:11 AM, Bruno Marchal <marc...@ulb.ac.be>wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 21 Nov 2013, at 13:41, Telmo Menezes wrote:
>>>>
>>>>  On Thu, Nov 21, 2013 at 11:40 AM, Bruno Marchal <marc...@ulb.ac.be>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 21 Nov 2013, at 11:05, Telmo Menezes wrote:
>>>>>> <snip>
>>>>>> If nobody complains on his local decentralized power, the central
>>>>>> power
>>>>>> should have nothing to say, but if the locals complain about their
>>>>>> local
>>>>>> powers, the central power can be used as an arbiter.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> I agree that this is a risk. I don't claim that there is any system
>>>>> that could be implemented and would solve all the problems, that's the
>>>>> danger with ideologies.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I agree.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> My belief is that "human evolution" -> "better forms of governance",
>>>>> not the other way around. So democracy, with all its flaws, was made
>>>>> possible by a new level of human development. Here I mean evolution
>>>>> and development in the broad sense, not the biological sense. This is
>>>>> made clear by the attempts to force democracy on less developed
>>>>> societies.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> OK.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  My point is that, as we evolve further, maybe the
>>>>> decentralized system can exist without incurring so much on the risks
>>>>> that you mention, and at the same time being much more resilient to
>>>>> sociopathic manipulations.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> About this I am not sure. With local powers you augment the risk of the
>>>> "little bureaucratic sort of bosses".
>>>> With some level of "spiritual maturity", I can conceive that you are
>>>> right, but since sometimes I am not sure such spiritual maturity exists,
>>>> nor even that it is on a near horizon.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>>>  The deeper problem relies in the fact that most humans are
>>>>>>>> unwilling to
>>>>>>>> think by themselves, and they confuse "p -> q" and "q -> p" all the
>>>>>>>> times.
>>>>>>>> The (human, but not only) sciences are still driven by the appeal to
>>>>>>>> authority. We have never been "modern".
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I'm happy to read this. I thought this confusion was a central
>>>>>>> problem
>>>>>>> in society for a long time, without being an expert in logic.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The problem is that "p <-> q" is far better than nothing, in the
>>>>>> short run,
>>>>>> so our brains are hardwired to "reason" by association, instead, of
>>>>>> logical
>>>>>> validity. Logic is by essence counter-intuitive (which explains the
>>>>>> logician's sense of humor).
>>>>>> The short term/long term conflict is unavoidable. Humans face it all
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> time, like when hesitating to stop smoking, or to stop producing CO2,
>>>>>> etc.
>>>>>> It is even more complex today due to globalization. With the 20th
>>>>>> century,
>>>>>> earth has become a finite space, and this has to be taken into
>>>>>> account, and
>>>>>> it is not a simple task, as we have to change habits that we have
>>>>>> since a
>>>>>> very long time. In the long run, we will have to escape the planet and
>>>>>> continue to run forward. But meanwhile, we have to accommodate with
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> finite resourcing, with or without global warming. That's a reason
>>>>>> more to
>>>>>> fight against corporatism, special private interests, international
>>>>>> white
>>>>>> collar criminality, etc.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Right, but the hope of some people who propose a radically free market
>>>>> is that it would work more like the immune system, and that it would
>>>>> allocate resources in a more efficient way than central control.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I am for a free market. The market should be independent of the
>>>> (central) power, except for the modalities of the contracts, the selling
>>>> technic, etc.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  The
>>>>> long term view is not foreign to markets. This is precisely what
>>>>> investments are. Warren Buffet became extremely rich by taking a long
>>>>> view on investments, not by doing high-frequency trading. But again, I
>>>>> say this with the human evolution caveat in mind.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Local powers can easily design laws against foreigners, and develop
>>>> selfish local profits method. In the UD this could enlarge the gap between
>>>> black and white, or between middle class and lower classes.
>>>> I would favor a stable central power, which would enforce few but basic
>>>> important laws and rules, on which everyone agrees. Then the local powers
>>>> can implement special politics and experiences.
>>>> Somehow I do believe that the Americans were close to this, but they
>>>> failed to prevent prohibition, and that remains a bit of a mystery for me.
>>>> I am open to the idea that there has been a real well prepared conspiracy,
>>>> not by "illuminati" but by by a collusion of special interests (paper, oil,
>>>> pharma, military, jails, and the black market, etc.).
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> I'm also strongly in favour of experiments. For example, and this
>>>>> would certainly annoy most libertarians, I am very excited by the
>>>>> Swiss plan to provide a base level of income to all citizens.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I have always defended that idea.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  I like
>>>>> it because it's so simple and non-intrusive. You just give everyone
>>>>> the same base income, no matter how poor or rich they are.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Yes. That is what the communist never grasped. It makes no sense to
>>>> distribute the money from the rich to the poor, this makes the richer less
>>>> rich, and very quickly the poor even much less rich. As long as people
>>>> don't use lies and dishonest methods, people should be able to enrich
>>>> themselves as much as they want. But we must find a way to prevent the bad
>>>> use of money to enrich oneself. And this asks for very special laws against
>>>> the fake speculation. The problem is that with enough money, you can
>>>> multiplied your richness easily by dishonest means, and this perverts the
>>>> system.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  Hopefully
>>>>> it will remove unnecessary and even counter-productive jobs, free more
>>>>> people from meaningless lives and attack the entire "job mentality".
>>>>> One can hope...
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I agree. I believe that it will be more easy to avoid
>>>> counter-productive jobs if there is a minimal salary. It would stabilize
>>>> the little markets, and would annoy only those who are addicted to "more
>>>> money at all price".
>>>> For the "job mentality", I'm afraid we will need a coming back to
>>>> seriousness in the human sciences, but this will take time, and some
>>>> catastrophes. The "job mentality" is not unrelated to the current
>>>> institutionalized religions, and the current conception of reality.
>>>>
>>>> Bruno
>>>>
>>>> http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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