Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
Inertia, not slow change, and if you want to wind back the IT clock, then you can kiss things like the Human Genome Project and most other new technology, including internet, goodbye for decades. We wouldn't be talking to each other in a communist system, unless we had some evil capitalists and their innovations to sponge off of.
Inertia, not slow change, and if you want to wind back the IT clock, then you can kiss things like the Human Genome Project and most other new technology, including internet, goodbye for decades. We wouldn't be talking to each other in a communist system, unless we had some evil capitalists and their innovations to sponge off of.
Technology will advance at a rate that we choose for it to advance. I just don't see that it is efficient for the system to make so many changes in organization. That is a con for capitalism, not a pro. There are a lot of resources and training wasted in such a dynamic system.
Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
One of the most fun times I've had with toys was touring Soviet navy ships in San Diego. An Udaloy and a Sovremenny, pride of the Soviet navy, newest ship classes, and 20-25 years behind US technology.![Big Grin](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/biggrin.gif)
Keep up the good work, comrades.
One of the most fun times I've had with toys was touring Soviet navy ships in San Diego. An Udaloy and a Sovremenny, pride of the Soviet navy, newest ship classes, and 20-25 years behind US technology.
![Big Grin](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/biggrin.gif)
Keep up the good work, comrades.
![Party!](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/biggrinparty.gif)
![Stick Out Tongue](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/tongue.gif)
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