You Will Never be Immortal
/You will never be immortal. Immortality will one day exist, but you’ll never experience it. Nor will I. It will never be meant for people like us.
Read MoreYou will never be immortal. Immortality will one day exist, but you’ll never experience it. Nor will I. It will never be meant for people like us.
Read MoreYou’re awake and you aren’t going back to sleep. You need 2 dishwashers to make your life whole and you won’t be complete until you own both of them. The only question now is; how do you justify it to your family?
Read MoreQuit melting in the heat and suffering from a lack of air conditioning. Quickly cool your room on a summer night - no extra equipment required!
Read MoreStoski is your movie guy from now on. Watch what you're told and you'll have a good life. Resist, and I got no sympathy for ya.
Read MoreWe’re spending hours looking for the perfect laptop, the perfect smartphone, the perfect audio system. The one better than the rest. The one with the highest specs and the best features, at a lower price than anyone else. With better “something” than anything else. It’ll never come. This is all time wasted. Nothing will come of it.
Read MoreAnyone who claims that outdated console hardware impedes innovation in the pc gaming space clearly hasn’t considered that pc gaming has this very thing built into it’s very existence.
Read MoreInflation is a spook invented by the wealthy elite to keep the working man down and devalue his efforts from under him. It's an excuse to stealthily pay him less for the exact same work, and claim that nothing has changed, despite the fact that his rent now takes a bigger percentage of his paycheck, and he isn't able to afford healthy nutritious meals for his family.
His purchasing power is eroded by a combination of increasing prices and stagnating wages. Since this is a function of "the economy" and not his employer, they get to throw their hands up and say "sorry pal maybe you should have worked harder". The worker is bamboozled by all of this, concludes that all of these “smart people” must know what they’re talking about, and therefore he alone must be to blame for his predicament. This is far from the case, not that he will ever know.
In real terms (purchasing power), the worker is paid less and less on one side, while companies continually raise their prices to meet inflation on the other. If the worker ever manages to get a raise then the boss needn't worry for too long because inflation means that that worker will soon go back to being underpaid, unless the government matches minimum wage growth to inflation, virtually guaranteeing a stable transfer of purchasing power from employer to worker. They they won't do it, by the way, because then the worker will be able to attain a decent quality of life, dream of taking holidays, and other such frivolous nonsense that does not benefit the corporate ruling class.
"A continual increase in the price of goods and services" is probably the purest explanation you'll find outside of the Ivy League. What does that mean, though? It means that, next year, and indeed every year, things will be more expensive than they have been in the previous years. This growth isn't linear though - it's exponential. Inflation is a growth in prices of about 1-2% per year. That means this year’s growth is greater than last year’s growth, and next year’s growth will be bigger than this year’s growth, and so on, until an increase of $10 for a bottle of milk from one year to the next won’t even make you blink. That's the power (or curse) of exponential growth. Prices can start rising by a few cents per year but even a $100 increase in one year is inevitable.
Ever wonder why some countries had their equivalent of a 1 cent, and even a 1/2 cent coin, but they’ve been long since phased out? Inflation is the culprit. 1 cent once represented significant purchasing power, but today, in countries that still have 1 cent coins, some people don’t even bother picking change off of the counter if it amounts to a few cents. That is the inevitable fate of even the 1 dollar coin (or bill). You can go and see the power of the dollar eroding on websites like Official Data. In 1800, one single dollar had the purchasing power of twenty of our dollars, meaning that what costs $20 today - a haircut, a bus ride, a movie ticket - only cost a single dollar in the early 1800s.
Now imagine that. What cost $1 now costs $20. Has the amount of good or service risen by 20 times? Does the bus take you twenty times as far? Does the barber cut your hair twenty times as fast, or as well? Clearly not, and yet these things cost twenty times as much all the same. Now why is this? What reason could there be that can justify such horrendous price increases?
Some might say that it doesn't matter that prices rise because wages rise along with them, creating equilibrium. Well, if equilibrium would exist anyway, why not keep all prices where they are instead of partaking in this pointless rat/arms race between wages and prices? That's the rub. It's by design. Why make things simple, and thereby the workers content, when you can introduce a system that keeps them working as hard as they can to simply stay where they are? It allows the creation of convenient excuses for cutting wages of the working class.
The classic retort to any assertion that inflation is anything but righteous and true, is that prices have gone up because more money has been created and therefore each existing unit of currency is now worth that much less. This is nothing but yet another argument in a long line of arguments that make sense only if you accept them at face value. Of course my dollar is worth less now that there are more dollars; the last bottle of water in the country is worth more than it's weight in gold, but if a truck of water shows up then that bottle is suddenly worth much less. See? Same thing! Only it isn't. currency isn’t a product, it’s the thing that we exchange for products. Why is it governed by the same rules that govern products? Ask that simple question, and the whole idea falls flat on its face.
Inflation nerds will then try to convince you that inflation is an inherent byproduct of the capitalist system, as if it's a inarguable rule of the universe that prices rise over time as an economy grows. Shrewd players will notice that our entire modern way of life is made up. Nothing "just exists". Stuff happens because people make it happen, usually for their own selfish reasons. You're telling me that inflation is some mystical force that infects our financial systems and no-one can do a thing to stop it? Come on! Inflation, just like anything else, is something that humans just made up. Only the unthinking fool actually believes in these things as a staple of life. They aren't! It's all made up! There's no reason the governments around the world can't come together and agree that inflation is a bad idea and that prices are just fine where they are right now. No reason at all.
Again, inflation isn't a law of the universe, it's a man-made construct that people believe in because they've bought too far into the idea that things exist within our society simply because they ought to exist. The reality is that it's all made up by people no smarter than you or me.
Next, you'll hear that inflation is actually a good thing because it prevents people from hoarding money. First off, news flash: We already have people like that. They're called billionaires (but they don't hoard cash technically so I guess we can have fun watching the middle-class billionaire-defenders cry that Jeff Bezos isn't getting a fair go). Also, I don't think that a good answer to the 'some people will have too much money' problem is to make sure that most people have as little purchasing power as possible. Why do proponents of inflation want to stop people from having purchasing power? Are the proponents of inflation actually communists? The main draw of capitalism is that anyone can get ahead and have a good life if they work hard. Now these people want to say "nerts" to that and take away purchasing power that has been rightfully and fairly earned. Not only that, they want to put the decision for fair wages in the hands of the corporation - an entity that seeks to minimize wages and maximize profit at the expense of all else.
So don't let anyone try to convince you of the virtues, necessity, or inevitability of inflation. It's a con designed to keep the working man down, and reliant on his employer. People make all sorts of excuses as to why inflation is a good and right thing, but isn't a good thing, and it sure as hell isn't an unavoidable byproduct of economic activity. Corporations use in as an excuse to silently cut their employees' pay, and governments around the world could put a stop to it if they had incentive to do so. Don't believe otherwise. It’s far to convenient to be a coincidence.
Zombie flicks are simultaneously over- and under-rated. On one hand they can be this interesting and masterfully done film that takes you by surprise and pound you over the head with spot-on acting, dialogue, set-piece, and world-building. On the other hand, they can be the same old schlock that you’ve seen a thousand times before, that you keep coming back to, because it’s just that damn good.
Read MoreLife moves on and people ultimately don’t care
Read MoreThe modding and tinkering scene is easily the most infuriating part of pc gaming. Amazing things are achieved, but instead of making it easy for the average person to enjoy their fruits of the authors’ labour, it’s locked behind time-consuming and enigmatic instructions that dissuade people from getting involved in something that would otherwise be amazingly fun and enjoyable for everyone.
Read MoreIn Daggerfall, you’re a citizen and an inhabitant who made a life for themselves. Daggerfall is a real RPG that lets you live another life in another world. Morrowind is an action game that people mistake for an RPG because of stats and worthless combat mechanics.
Read MoreStoski is your movie guy from now on. Watch what you're told and you'll have a good life. Resist, and I got no sympathy for ya.
Read MoreThink about why it is that companies offer something for "free" with their product, and who really profits, and whether it actually benefits you in the long run. You'll find that it doesn't actually do much for you at all.
Read MoreA VPN might be paramount for privacy and security in some people's minds but we should be wary before we hand everything that we're trying to keep secure - to one single corporation.
Read MoreIt isn't really in everyone's best interest to be left to their own devices. Sometimes you just need some good old fashioned external interference.
Read MoreIs emulation ethical? Is emulation legal? Should we emulate games? In short; yes. We should all emulate older out-of-print games. The "why" is a bit more complicated.
Read MoreStoski is your movie guy from now on. Watch what you're told and you'll have a good life. Resist, and I got no sympathy for ya.
Read MoreGames shouldn’t ship as a half-finished mess filled with bugs. Mods should be used to augment the gameplay experience in a complete game, not to finish the game because developers would rather let the community do their jobs than spend the time and money to do it properly themselves.
Read MoreStoski is your movie guy from now on. Watch what you're told and you'll have a good life. Resist, and I got no sympathy for ya.
Read MoreStoski is your movie guy from now on. Watch what you're told and you'll have a good life. Resist, and I got no sympathy for ya.
Read MoreThe no. 1 destination for all things Stoski. Follow all the stories, banter, (mis)adventures, and all-round fantastic content, some of it actually coherent, relating to your favorite lovable spicy scamp. Only at StoskiM.com