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#8 | Posted by Nixon at 2026-06-24 06:52 AM
That said, there are plenty of jobs being lost to foreigners who will come in with advanced degrees and do the work for pennies on the dollar while telecommuting from India, Pakistan, etc.

Every single year 1040 preparation work is sent overseas to foreign nations where a return that would cost $1000 in time here to prepare and review will be done for $200 and still billed out for $1700 to the client.

If only there was something to stop those damn "globalists" and advances in "cheaper better faster" technology!


The next step is already happening with letting a business return that can be billed for $4000 will be prepared for $100 by AI. I've seen both the good and the bad with AI used in tax law research.

Like with most technologies, there is good and bad... "bad" mostly relates to eliminating or completely changing the nature of certain jobs affected by technology.

www.reuters.com - Google to spend $15 billion on AI infrastructure hub in biggest India investment - 2025-10-14

cloud.google.com - Announcing America-India Connect and new investments to advance global AI access - 2026-02-18

www.cnbc.com - Over $50 billion in under 24 hours: Why Big Tech is doubling down on investing in India - 2025-12-11

www.cnbc.com - How a $4 billion Indian startup Cred won Meta's backing but lost its founder to WhatsApp - 2026-06-22


Both the Left and the Right are pining for the "good old" but ephemeral 1950s, "when a working man without much education could buy a house, a car, and comfortably support entire family on single salary" - they just blame a different color Tribe for that, but offer near-identical populist remedies that have never worked as advertised and usually make things worse for most people, especially those they claim they want to help.
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Exceptionalism Can Be Lonely -- Ask Britain

There is nothing about "exceptionalism" in the headline or the article - Britain of "Rule, Britannia!" has not been "exceptional" for centuries.

Article is "exceptionally" anti-Brexit biased - not surprisingly, reflecting NYT point of view - but, also not surprisingly, plays fast and lose with economic data.

Brexit was supposed to let Britain return to a time when it still counted as a global power.

BS, UK is world's fifth largest economy and on course of overtaking Japan in near future; Brexit was about independence from politics and taxes of "Brussels" and independence of their economy and currency (GBP) from EURo... just like Canada not wanting to be "51st state" of the USA.

Brexit still holds majority of mindshare in Britain: "There is now a mountain of evidence that support for rejoining the EU crumbles when the costs and conditions are revealed. We Brits still value our sovereignty and do not want to hand control back to Brussels."
https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/2216906/rejoin-eu-campaign-faces-nightmare - Rejoin EU campaign faces nightmare - 2026-10-13


Mr. Starmer was the sixth occupant of the office during the past decade. In the previous two decades, there had been just three prime ministers.

Again, sleight of hand comparison - Britain's current social problems wouldn't be any easier had they stayed in EU - EU had and still has their share of turnovers / "flipping" of failed "conservative" and "liberal/progressive" governments and deep divisions in the last decade (see Italy, Greece, France, Germany, Belgium etc.) - this actually coincides more with the issue of "immigrants" and arrival of destabilizing Trump on the political scene than anything to do with Britain or Brexit specifically.

For example, relatively more stable 4-year USA system had 3 two-term presidents (changes of party in power) in 24 years since 1993, and 3 one-term changes during the past 10 years.

Starmer/Labour, in particular, won last election with the lowest number of delegates in the history of UK.

Now, to the real economics of Brexit:

UK's predicted "economic collapse" due to Brexit didn't happen; in fact, their average growth rate since is higher than many in EU, Canada and Japan:

Real per capita compound annual GDP growth rate change - (2016-2025) delta (2007-2016) in USD (data from https://data-explorer.oecd.org/?lc=en):
............... PPP ... nominal
Germany : -5.9% ... -5.4%
Japan :.. +3.2% ... -0.8%
France :. +6.4% ... +4.5%
Canada :. +0.9% ... +7.2%
UK :.... +3.2% ... +9.0%
USA :... +12.1% ... +11.0%


In 2015 UK exports to EU members were only 42.3% of total exports, least of any other EU countries;

Second largest importer of UK exports was the USA, and since 2011, US GDP grew by 40.0%, almost 2x of EU's 20.5% growth rate, increasing nominal value of UK exports.

Sure, UK has problems, their taxes and costs are higher and regulations have not eased, "green energy" policies are hurting their economy, NHS is a wreck... but none of that would be remedied had they stayed in EU.

Brexit (and keeping the GBP) was not the economic disaster many predicted, rejoining is not the solution to internal problems.
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Wasn't it valued crazy high from the start?
#19 | Posted by REDIAL

Under normal perceptions of business valuations, revenue needs to grow ~100x year over year.

Is that possible?

"Revenue growth has ranged in recent years from 51% in 2024 to 100% in 2021." www.reuters.com

The Reuters article is from April so a lot of the frenzy wasn't priced in at the time.

Morningstar values SpaceX at $700B, less than half of current market cap. SpaceX only has one profitable customer, Starlink.

The other thing that happened in space investing is lots of money went out of smaller startups and into SpaceX. Very much looks like a bandwagon thing.

If you buy any stock at IPO, especially one whose valuation seems to be based on long-term 100x yoy growth, you're probably buying a rug pull.

More collapses ..
x.com

Guesstimates 100,000 lost their lives.

I'm Done, I'm Not in That ------ Political Party': James Carville
www.yahoo.com

Seems like Carville agrees with me, same with Corky's ------------ buddy Nate Silver.

But Corky is blind to the situation.

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