Hello Chris,
I guess you and I have different ideas about what is good.
How can something negative be positive.
Personally I am sorry for the US decline, which I acknowledge.
I think that it is negative to people everywhere.
The reason we see this decline is the inability to change with the times.
US is a very conservative nation and changes are very hard to implement.
I am a Swede from the beginning so I can see the differences.
Your definition of a conspiracy is not mine. I think there is no conscious
ambition to prevent development - I think it is the scare of something new.
I think we all would be much better of if the US could make the changes so
apparently needed (as I see it).
I am amazed over your wants to see others decline. What good is that? That
way of thinking is only applicable if you think life is some kind of zero
sum game.
To me that was very negative. Just cannot get my arms around that someone
can think like that.

Best Regards ,
Lennart Thornros


lenn...@thornros.com
+1 916 436 1899

Whatever you vividly imagine, ardently desire, sincerely believe and
enthusiastically act upon, must inevitably come to pass. (PJM)


On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 9:32 AM, Chris Zell <chrisz...@wetmtv.com> wrote:

> I am eagerly watching the decline of the US Empire and hoping that it’s
> end will finally break the logjam of technological stagnation that plagues
> the world.
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> Remember when President Crater was putting up solar panels about 40 years
> ago?  Do we have (hot) fusion now? Nope. How about a cure for cancer? Free
> energy? Cures for MS/ALS or diabetes or AIDS? Do our cars still mostly run
> on gasoline? Flying cars? Have we put men on Mars or back to the moon?
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> I can go on… yes, we have the internet and neat phones but the
> fundamentals have barely budged at all. And then there’s the economy!
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> Obstructive political parties and ‘old boys networks’ ARE conspiracies.
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