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Vladimir_Golovin comments on Existing Absurd Technologies - Less Wrong Discussion

23 Post author: Desrtopa 30 May 2011 06:12AM

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Comment author: Vladimir_Golovin 31 May 2011 03:35:52PM 1 point [-]

Revolutions help

Any data to back this up?

(I'm no expert here, but based on my own observations, I've yet to see a country that benefited from a revolution -- at least in the last decade. I may be wrong here, so any real data is welcome.)

Comment author: mutterc 01 June 2011 01:02:00AM 4 points [-]

I was without plumbing for several years as a teenager (1980s). Occasionally I marvel that I can use an automatic dishwasher instead of dipping up a pot from the rain barrel and heating it on the stove. It got mundane for me mighty quick though.

Comment author: MartinB 05 June 2011 07:18:33AM 2 points [-]

pretty much. Humans get used to new things amazingly fast. My family home got running water in the mid 80s, sewage and telephone in the 90s, central heating in the 00s. These days I get phones and netbooks for free and use them everywhere. My technology exposure curve was higher than common in the 90s, but it has evened out, and i am very used to all of the items I have. Living in the future is awesome!

Comment author: MixedNuts 31 May 2011 04:06:43PM 0 points [-]

No, I meant the opposite (well, I think some South American countries did, but I'm no expert and still ambivalent on the Chavez countercoup). A revolution actually happening is very bad. But the threat of a revolution keeps politicians in check; occasional revolutions are better than letting dictators run free because they know there won't be one.

I would nominate as an example the French Restauration; after a series of revolutions, the restored French monarchy moved towards constitutionalism and generally more freedom.