To: GPS Info who wrote (98492 ) 2/2/2013 6:09:40 PM From: Maurice Winn 3 Recommendations Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217542 This is a chat room for exchange of ideas and information. It's not a 1000 page text book or 100 page constitutional document being written. So of course there is no detailed anything. You pick up ideas [such as Tradable Citizenship] that may be of interest and think about them yourself if you like, adding information and ideas and critiques if you wish. <You relate anecdotes, as if there is some jewel of an idea in there, but you never spell it out. I am left to guess and to reply to vague ideas. > I'm not going to bother writing a vast tract of detail, all of which I haven't thought through and would not bother to think through and certainly not write about when it will be simply ignored. <Why would companies hire them to educate them if they can find others to hire that are already educated? Do they deduct the educational costs from their wages while they perform unskilled work? > If they can find equally talented people cheaper, of course they would not educate more to do the same thing. But the problem is they can't. As I already explained in excruciating detail [I thought], spelled out in fine print, obviously ignored, as I know it will be, BP Oil was paying vast amounts of money to British and German scientists to do R&D which could have been done by Made in China people are a tenth or 50th of the pay. Since none were educated in China to do that, it would make sense to spend a bit of money to educate them in a work, educate, work, educate, programme to get them up to speed. BP would pay a bit more than the rice-paddy price to attract them to the education and apprentice programme. Qualcomm is hiring plenty and of course pays the market rate. While educating people in apprenticeships, pay is normally a lot less than when they know lots. For example, Texaco Canada hired me at half the price they paid local yokels while I got up to speed, then my pay doubled when I was doing better than the locals. BP Oil International did the same - offered me less than the British, but that was heaps from my point of view. Now, having accumulated capital and invested, I'm in a position to hire cheap people in China to develop CDMA/OFDM mobile Cyberspace. And Huawei, [a CDMA/OFDM licensee], hires ElMatador to install fibre in Angola, which will feed to a Globalstar gateway, which will feed to my Globalstar satellites, so people in Angola will be able to use mobile Cyberspace anywhere. Huawei will probably hire and train local yokels in Angola to look after the fibre and whatnot. That's quite fine print, detail and spelled out. Near enough for government work and a chat room. No guesswork needed on your part. <How can their parents educate them if the parents are unskilled low-wage earners? > Teach them manners, money, work, nutrition, reading, writing, laws, and many other things which are necessary to do useful things. It's not really wishful thinking: < If the governments will get out of the way, you will find your problems are easily solved. I can only view this as wishful Libertarian thinking on your part. > There are centuries of examples and many countries which have enacted various levels of Libertarian ideology. For example, speaking of China, look at the last couple of hundred years there. And India. And South Korea versus North Korea. East Germany vs West. UK with VVV versus UK with The British Disease. Oil is not going to run out. See Sheik Yamani's quote for example. <My capital is hiring a lot of people in China. Once you can quantify that assertion, we can project how long it will take to construct a viable market in China. This might not happen before oil runs out. > Peak People in 2037 will see Peak Oil. There's no shortage of oil/coal/gas/tars. The viable market in China has already been constructed and we are discussing the rapidly rising cost of hiring people. It's a done deal. There is a so-called 'shortage' of people already. There isn't, but that's the claim. Sorry if that's too detailed and spelled out for a chat room Mqurice