publicduende wrote:He chose to let his frustration get to him to the point he could no longer see straight, and he took on Italy as the scapegoats of all that is wrong in Western Europe and perhaps the world.

Oh gsjackson, you have no idea who are the 1% bracket in London...definitely not me and my wife, I can guarantee yougsjackson wrote:PD, you may not identify with them politically, but you are solidly in the one percent. That is a City of London financial profile, which bears no relation to the real economy that most people have to live in. Especially in the U.S., where something like 70 percent of the population has virtually no net worth, and lives paycheck to paycheck.
Without making any comment about the psychological/mental health issues you and EB have raised, I would agree with Rock that EB is in a fairly enviable situation -- young, free of debt (I presume) and commitments, living in one of the world's great cities, making enough to have a decent social life and travel occasionally. The sort of career tracks you seem to be recommending to him just aren't available to him in the U.S. now. A young white male from the West coast with a B.A. -- no, all he can do is scramble and freelance, just like he's doing in Berlin, and make about the same amount of money.
I have to assume you are talking about Serbia and Belgrade, when you say "the Balkans". There's obviously little to compare and a lot to contrast putting Berlin and Belgrade, indeed Europe's engine Gemany and post-soviet (semi-)failed state Serbia, on the same table. Can I just point out that it's never that black and white, even in cities where the predominant socio-demographic trends seem to favour a certain type of economic status and lifestyle. Yes, Berlin is famous for its large swathes of young people from the four corners of Europe who acknowledge the (relatively) limited career opportunities and just sit back and enjoy occasional jobs and the cheap beer and laid back life. And yes, London often makes the news about the sky-high cost of its fancy pubs and glamorous restaurants, the off-limits rents and house prices, the arrays of MacLarens and Ferraris parked everywhere around Knightsbridge and Chelsea.gsjackson wrote:Again, without making any judgment about whether someone is truly happy -- which always depends on the individual and his attitude, notwithstanding the thesis of this website -- I would note also that when I flew into Berlin after a month and a half in the Balkans, the comparative sense of economic vibrancy was palpable. While most of us here lambaste the superficialities and distorted values of western consumer capitalism, there may be something to EB's notion that economic prosperity has something to do with the quality of social relations. I'm here to testify that in the golden economic era of the U.S., circa 1945-1973, the human climate was far more agreeable. And I'm not misremembering. Now it's all about the hustle and the con; everybody's a mark.
More of your projections and assumptions. Knowing what you know about me, you know that my paycheck is the last factor that could define my happiness, and it has in fact been so for much longer than that momentous 2011. My responsibilities don't come from the paycheck, in fact being a contractor means having the least amount of responsibility (quite a lot of liability, though, as people often see you as some sort of technical wizard) and the freedom to leave after 6 months or a year. The responsibilities come from the fact that I want to feel responsible for those choices of mine that directly affect my wife and the family I may be having in the near future.eurobrat wrote:See Public Duende seems to see happiness as just getting a big pay check where I see no problem with a smaller pay check but more nomad and free lifestyle. I don't want the responsibilities he has right now or the headache he experiences, because I've been there and done that.
Duende, maybe you have some more delusions going on inside your head thinking you're broke "woe is me I only have a £600k house in Cambridge" but in reality you are who you hate, you are in the top 1%.publicduende wrote: Oh gsjackson, you have no idea who are the 1% bracket in London...definitely not me and my wife, I can guarantee you
The mean income in London was £22,800 per year with the average Briton paying £4,060 in income tax.
Percentile point
Top 1%
Wealth to qualify
£688,228
Percentage of total wealth owned by people at and above this level
21% of total UK wealth
Are you talking about income or equity (or total assets)? Are you talking about students and families who live on welfare (and lots of undeclared income) in the 50% of suburban London that is deprived and depressed? If you really have to compare, do it with my age brackets. The 1% of that bracket is millionaires. A modest businessman is a millionaire. A senior doctor is a millionaire. A few friends of mine make the same money as me and sit on at couple of millions of equity. They are "more 1%" than me, so I am definitely not 1% in my demographics in London.eurobrat wrote:Duende, maybe you have some more delusions going on inside your head thinking you're broke "woe is me I only have a £600k house in Cambridge" but in reality you are who you hate, you are in the top 1%.publicduende wrote: Oh gsjackson, you have no idea who are the 1% bracket in London...definitely not me and my wife, I can guarantee you
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_in_ ... ed_Kingdom
The mean income in London was £22,800 per year with the average Briton paying £4,060 in income tax.
Percentile point
Top 1%
Wealth to qualify
£688,228
Percentage of total wealth owned by people at and above this level
21% of total UK wealth
What help? LOL. Sorry but if thats the best you got for friendship and help then you need to take a look at what you're selling. I remember you telling me at one point "Pagaia la tua canoa".publicduende wrote:Not to sound cheesy, but I did lend my hand and offered my friendship and my help. You chose to pack as much hate as you could, pour it over an entire country blindly and now being all excited about a society that is nowhere near as radically different as you think. As they say in Italian, "tutto bene, speriamo solo che duri" (all good, one can only hope it will last).
According to the demographics then when you're done with your project, you're in the top 1%. Sorry but £600k parked in one house has no appeal to me, you could probably buy a night club and all the p***y you could handle in the Philippines for that much money.publicduende wrote:Are you talking about income or equity (or total assets)? Are you talking about students and families who live on welfare (and lots of undeclared income) in the 50% of suburban London that is deprived and depressed? If you really have to compare, do it with my age brackets. The 1% of that bracket is millionaires. A modest businessman is a millionaire. A senior doctor is a millionaire. A few friends of mine make the same money as me and sit on at couple of millions of equity. They are "more 1%" than me, so I am definitely not 1% in my demographics in London.eurobrat wrote:Duende, maybe you have some more delusions going on inside your head thinking you're broke "woe is me I only have a £600k house in Cambridge" but in reality you are who you hate, you are in the top 1%.publicduende wrote: Oh gsjackson, you have no idea who are the 1% bracket in London...definitely not me and my wife, I can guarantee you
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_in_ ... ed_Kingdom
The mean income in London was £22,800 per year with the average Briton paying £4,060 in income tax.
Percentile point
Top 1%
Wealth to qualify
£688,228
Percentage of total wealth owned by people at and above this level
21% of total UK wealth
LOL did you read what I wrote? I don't have a £600K house equity. I project I will have that sort of figure once the remodelling project is done and if the markets don't tank (which they might, but I won't care too much as that's the house I'll be living in). And I will have to shell out at least £200K for that to happen.
And since you said you've done all that a couple of years ago, so a full 14 years before me, what exactly is your point?
I am talking about Belgrade, where I spent 40 days this trip, Sarajevo, where I spent a month this trip, side trips to Novi Sad and Mostar, and a couple months spent all over Croatia on this trip and others.publicduende wrote: I have to assume you are talking about Serbia and Belgrade, when you say "the Balkans". There's obviously little to compare and a lot to contrast putting Berlin and Belgrade, indeed Europe's engine Gemany and post-soviet (semi-)failed state Serbia, on the same table. Can I just point out that it's never that black and white, even in cities where the predominant socio-demographic trends seem to favour a certain type of economic status and lifestyle. Yes, Berlin is famous for its large swathes of young people from the four corners of Europe who acknowledge the (relatively) limited career opportunities and just sit back and enjoy occasional jobs and the cheap beer and laid back life.
Ohhh.... Mr. London 1% was just schooled on European cold war history by Mr. Jackson...gsjackson wrote:I am talking about Belgrade, where I spent 40 days this trip, Sarajevo, where I spent a month this trip, side trips to Novi Sad and Mostar, and a couple months spent all over Croatia on this trip and others.publicduende wrote: I have to assume you are talking about Serbia and Belgrade, when you say "the Balkans". There's obviously little to compare and a lot to contrast putting Berlin and Belgrade, indeed Europe's engine Gemany and post-soviet (semi-)failed state Serbia, on the same table. Can I just point out that it's never that black and white, even in cities where the predominant socio-demographic trends seem to favour a certain type of economic status and lifestyle. Yes, Berlin is famous for its large swathes of young people from the four corners of Europe who acknowledge the (relatively) limited career opportunities and just sit back and enjoy occasional jobs and the cheap beer and laid back life.
I don't think it's correct to refer to Yugoslavia as ever having been "post-Soviet." They were never aligned with the Soviet bloc, and if Belgrade tour guides are to be believed, Stalin called for Tito's assassination. Apparently, Yugoslavia had a model of socialism that worked better than the Soviets'. A functional model of socialism just wouldn't do, so the West broke Yugoslavia up into seven impoverished, corrupt little kleptocracies.
The vibe of economic vibrancy I sensed in Berlin had to do with the substantial middle class and their retail opportunities, not young people living la vie de boheme. My impressions are hardly the final word on the subject, but I think there may be something to EB's contention that economic prosperity may correlate more with a friendlier social vibe than what you see in countries that are in economic decline.
Thanks for wanting to clarify on this, but I obviously didn't mean "post-Soviet" in an historical sense. I meant living conditions and a general vibe typical of socialist countries (such as Russia during Soviet times and immediately after the Soviet state collapse).gsjackson wrote:I am talking about Belgrade, where I spent 40 days this trip, Sarajevo, where I spent a month this trip, side trips to Novi Sad and Mostar, and a couple months spent all over Croatia on this trip and others.
I don't think it's correct to refer to Yugoslavia as ever having been "post-Soviet." They were never aligned with the Soviet bloc, and if Belgrade tour guides are to be believed, Stalin called for Tito's assassination. Apparently, Yugoslavia had a model of socialism that worked better than the Soviets'. A functional model of socialism just wouldn't do, so the West broke Yugoslavia up into seven impoverished, corrupt little kleptocracies.
The vibe of economic vibrancy I sensed in Berlin had to do with the substantial middle class and their retail opportunities, not young people living la vie de boheme. My impressions are hardly the final word on the subject, but I think there may be something to EB's contention that economic prosperity may correlate more with a friendlier social vibe than what you see in countries that are in economic decline.
Oh shut up, I clarified what I meant by post-Soviet. And that is said by someone who judges countries and cultures from the way he gets rejected when he tries to approach girls at the grocery shop. Hardly a scholarly opinion.eurobrat wrote:Ohhh.... Mr. London 1% was just schooled on European cold war history by Mr. Jackson...
Better than sitting in the corporate bathroom typing on your mobile.publicduende wrote:Oh shut up, I clarified what I meant by post-Soviet. And that is said by someone who judges countries and cultures from the way he gets rejected when he tries to approach girls at the grocery shop. Hardly a scholarly opinion.eurobrat wrote:Ohhh.... Mr. London 1% was just schooled on European cold war history by Mr. Jackson...
Just keep tapping on that laptop in your underpants, Mr Freedom
Most people who own estate in London have equity worth around that figure, sometimes a bit more sometimes a bit less. The housing market in London has grown at an insane rate, mostly thanks to those "property investors" from Saudi Arabia, China, Russia, and the rest of the UK.eurobrat wrote:According to the demographics then when you're done with your project, you're in the top 1%. Sorry but £600k parked in one house has no appeal to me, you could probably buy a night club and all the p***y you could handle in the Philippines for that much money.
I agree it's a distinction mostly without a difference. Indeed, being post-war and post-western-divide-and-plunder-tactics can be seen as far more economically traumatizing than having tried to implement the failed Soviet system for decades. But the fact that Balkans countries and Germany are apples and oranges still begs the question raised by EB of whether economically vibrant countries have a better social vibe than those in decline. Actually, I would have thought the opposite before venturing out to Europe -- the supposition was that hard economic times brought people together, as was true of the U.S. in the 1930s. But it seems like the hyper-individualism of today's zeitgeist means that hard times translate into hard people.publicduende wrote: Thanks for wanting to clarify on this, but I obviously didn't mean "post-Soviet" in an historical sense. I meant living conditions and a general vibe typical of socialist countries (such as Russia during Soviet times and immediately after the Soviet state collapse).
I remember visiting some towns in Croatia and even a town in Slovenia that had just hosted an important winter sports competition, so definitely "on the map", when I was a kid, long before the Bosnian war. I will never forget the run down shops and building, the old and rusty cars of a single brand (Yugo), majestic churches and some places of cultural heritage locked down or operating on a very occasional basis. More than ever I remember the large supermarkets with little or no merchandise on display.
Things didn't get better until after the war, when Croatia and Slovenia managed to escape the embrace of the Serbian-controlled central state and receive substantial investments from neighbouring countries (Germany and Austria, but Switzerland and Italy to some extent) and of course prop up their tourist industry, unleash their cultural heritage, reopen churches and museums.
The states that didn't reach escape velocity were Bosnia and the southern ones, were minorities were defenceless and still oppressed by the Serbian army. More than Belgrade, I would be interested to know how you found Sarajevo and Mostar, two cities that were devastated by the war.