/pol/ - Politically Incorrect

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Nanonymous No.4016 [D][U][F][S][L][A][C]
File: 10cacccabd2d113927a81938ca84e5e86ab684bc094b3e4429d1f5a16563a4e8.png (dl) (195.78 KiB)

LOL what the hell am i even looking at. sometimes i feel like giving up on this society? like holy shite what even happened, how are things still functioning. rip any delusions that we are not slaves. time to liberate ourselves
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this is a fifth-iteration overlay demonstrating the disconnect between the economic activity powered by a barrel of oil and the money supply that is meant to represent work being performed and and proportional trade occurring. were we in the midst of a forest gardening renaissance perhaps we would be having different discussions, there are infinite ways for naturalistic ecologies and societies to flourish. as it is the heavily-industrialized and monetized human society on the popular continents is at an extreme state of imbalance. Anne Osborne's Fruitarianism: Path to Paradise and Martin Crawford's Creating a Forest Garden; Working With Nature to Grow Edible Crops are important books to help us transition to the next age. Peeking at Peak Oil is very important for understanding the specificities of our fossil fuel energy production utilized to power most machines.

Nanonymous No.4017 [D]

forgot to add title, feel free to add one in if moderating this thread. whatever seems appropriate for the content

Nanonymous No.4018 [D]

will try to scale the angled graph properly later. it is sleepytime at the moment. i feel it is easy to visualize with this version though so i felt i would post it as is for the lulz. will make sure it is fairly accurate before posting it on some of the other chans though since it is kind of an important dataset, for the near future on popular calendars and clocks anyway

Nanonymous No.4019 [D][U][F]
File: 4313ed7908784e7caefa858ff269701c205b210a9ae1b449751bd61bf23569ff.png (dl) (183.92 KiB)

will finish it up tomorrow or quite soon with proper scaling, gotta research the indices they are citing

Nanonymous No.4020 [D][U][F]
File: d5e8751c483c63a71ac191bc023e3700f1c661043055af1b01cdbea9b90c72c0.jpg (dl) (194.52 KiB)



Nanonymous No.4021 [D]

sounds like someone doesn't want to compete for $0.25 an hour. well that's a shame timmy, but the market must be free, as must iran.

Nanonymous No.4022 [D]

it takes 144 hours of work in Nepal to make $1. i do wonder about that deviation point being around the time microprocessors became commonplace, affordable, and computationally significant by modern standards (remembering how much computational efficiency is squandered with modern computers; a genius can do more with a TI-83 than a typical computer user can with the modern processors). while i don't think that was the only cause of this particular divergence it did seem to enable it to continue vastly longer than it may have otherwise, accelerating in a way that ostensibly did not occur in previous eras that did not have such technologies. i am aware of hyperinflationary attacks on countries and such but am not aware of organic hyperinflation in ancient societies (being aware there were ancient societies with high technology, likely higher than our current technologies)