Red wrote:No, that'd make you look honest, instead of a dumbass who thinks they know what they're talking about.
I do not think so.
Red wrote:How does anyone get into power?
That is exactly what I have been asking, and you seem to be evading the question.
Red wrote:It's more complicated than that.
How did you learn English so well that you can understand those videos? Or are you just pretending to understand them fully?
Red wrote:People refer to the rich parts of Europe, not a shithole country like Croatia.
And if Croatia is such a
shithole country, why do people who move to Germany mostly return?
Red wrote:Croatia is not considered a first-world country
Right, Croatia is a third-world country just like Switzerland.
Red wrote:Yes I can, you can easily be spoiled by the democracy (what of it that you have) with a corrupt government that likes to spread propaganda about its country.
OK, fair enough.
Red wrote:AFAIK that's mostly Eastern Europe. Not the most prosperous places.
Well, I have not studied it that much though. As far as I know, everybody or almost everybody in Nordic countries pays income taxes, and those are rather high taxes (around 50%). It is completely unlike in the USA, where most of the people pay no or next-to-no income taxes, but the top 1% pays 80% of their income in taxes (and they used to pay as much as 90% during 1950s). Plus, much of the government revenue in the USA comes in the form of essentially-arbitrary taxes added to everyday products (which is partly why bread is so expensive in the USA compared to Europe), and there is no such thing in most European countries. In Croatia, almost everybody pays 23% of their income in taxes, and most products are taxed at a rate of around 13%.
Red wrote:TONS of testimonial witnesses and journalists getting into the country.
So, why are they more trustworthy than the government?
Red wrote: If the North Korean government really had nothing to hide they wouldn't be so secretive.
They are as secretive as the vast majority of governments were at the beginning of the 20th century, or for most of the human history.
Red wrote:It's already been explained to you that the US school system teaches its students about the horrible things the government did. It may be the case in your country, but not everywhere.
So, you think that, in most countries, children are being told the truth about their countries history?
Red wrote:You'd be a moron to believe everything these governments say.
Well, the consensus among social scientists seems to be that we should indeed believe everything these governments say.
Red wrote:BTW that example you mentioned in an earlier reply was CRITICAL of doing such a thing.
So? It makes it clear what the consensus among social scientists is.
Red wrote: Unlike you I decided to educate myself about it. It isn't hard.
Well, it is hard to get properly educated about the very social sciences, because it is hard to differentiate between science and pseudoscience there.
Red wrote:I have a feeling the website is blocked in your country because it revealed corruption in your government.
The link is HTTPS, so, if somebody was tampering with the connection (ISP or the government), the browser would detect it and refuse to connect. In my experience, if a web-site is banned in Croatia (mostly Serbian websites) and you try to access it, you will get the "invalid certificate" error, and, if you click "proceed", you get redirected to a webpage on "zakon.hr" explaining why the website got banned.
Red wrote:Use a VPN, or just try refreshing. The link works fine.
Tried again, nope, I still get the same error message. And I will not try to use a VPN because I am a computer science student and I know how the Internet works, so I know it is ridiculous to expect a VPN to solve the problem. And that it is ridiculous to believe you that the link works for you.
Red wrote: They have no reason to please the common people
Common sense tells us he does, or else people will revolt. In a dictatorship, people feel an urge to revolt, much more so than in a democracy.
Red wrote:Why do dictatorships right now have some of the lowest standards of living and human development, and democracies have the highest standards?
Because that is not true. Consider the well-known cases of India and China, for example. And if you will claim India is not a democracy, you are probably committing the no-true-Scotsman fallacy.
Red wrote:No, not just food, natural resources in general.
Other natural resources are, by definition, a second-sector economy. Come on now, this is 7th-grade stuff.
Red wrote:you obviously don't understand how the social sciences work.
Oh, please, lecture me, how is that video science in any sense? Where are the measurements? Where is the statistical analysis of the measurements, preferably including the p-value? What observation would even falsify its claims?
Red wrote:Maybe read the book yourself, you be the judge.
Sorry, you have not convinced me it is worth the time. Maybe if it was in Croatian, but in English, so that I need to look up every other word in a dictionary...