The world after the Coronavirus pandemic ends.

TLR Is Mental Poison

The Coli Is Not For You
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The Opposite Of Elliott Wilson's Mohawk
This is a great analysis and actually paints the picture of potentially a simpler future. The problem is finding work for the millions impacted by the pandemic, jobs that won't be able to survive it. How do you replace those jobs in an ever-increasing automation and work-from-home culture, where are they coming from?
Some jobs will always need people in person.

I also think that people will be itching to get back out in public and around other people ASAP, so all the jobs that support that will come back quickly too.
 

murksiderock

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SMF and LAX to VA and NC
Some jobs will always need people in person.

I also think that people will be itching to get back out in public and around other people ASAP, so all the jobs that support that will come back quickly too.

Right, but there are going to be a number of businesses (retail, culinary, movie theaters, basically different service sectors) that employ millions that won't be able to open back up...

So then you're left with many more people than jobs, my question is where will the replacement jobs come from? But I don't disagree, the jobs that survive will be able to eat strongly...
 

you're NOT "n!ggas"

FKA ciroq drobama
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And gold and silver coins wasn’t any better?
And coins, all that bullshyt.
At the base, "money" has to be removed from medicine and survival. Money isn't medicine. If you're in the wild, money won't help you survive. It's nothing. We need an economy that understands this and moves accordingly.
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

The Coli Is Not For You
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Right, but there are going to be a number of businesses (retail, culinary, movie theaters, basically different service sectors) that employ millions that won't be able to open back up...

So then you're left with many more people than jobs, my question is where will the replacement jobs come from? But I don't disagree, the jobs that survive will be able to eat strongly...
You really think people aren't gonna go back to shop and eat out :comeon:

I live on a golf course and see groups of people playing golf every day. I see people out running and on their bikes. Restaurants here are still open, they are just doing take out. shyt is not gonna completely collapse bro.
 

seymour cake

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It's gonna be worse especially if they really start enforcing the quarantine.. People gonna be wildin when shyt start opening back up. Dont let us miss the summer either.
 

Caca-faat

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This is a great analysis and actually paints the picture of potentially a simpler future. The problem is finding work for the millions impacted by the pandemic, jobs that won't be able to survive it. How do you replace those jobs in an ever-increasing automation and work-from-home culture, where are they coming from?

New Entrepreneurs will pop up with new requirements, the work week will change or be on shift rotation, I imagine to ease us in. In 30 years we will all be working from home, technology would have moved forward exponentially. But I reckon, that there will be more of a service economy as customer service centers will be an increasing need during the transition as we move forward; what they do after that with that service economy is another issue. Large companies will have more customer service centers back in their own country pulling them out of places like India and Egypt, creating a massive cyclical potentially generational underclass. The ideologies we currently have about manual vs technical jobs will remain the same with people creating a solid social of those who can work from home vs those who cant.
 

null

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societal PTSD, nationalism (exploited by politicians), a more ideologically splintered electorate, underlying debt levels and economic warfare will delay a return to our previous economic trajectory.

racism and xenophobia will increase and remain at elevated levels - especially in italy, spain and other such similarly affected countries in europe, especially against asians.

international trade with china will decrease - esp. for foodstuffs and more essential items like medical supplies. "made in europe / the americas" / "non-Chinese components / ingredients" will become things, official ISO health designations related to disease outbreaks.

on the positive side I think we will see more international collaborative research, more remote working, more focus on health systems and outcomes, a move to eat healthier food and less meat, greater preparedness for similar disease outbreaks, more sanitation / healthy environment design in home / cars / devices, a brief uptick in family focus, greater respect and financial rewards for essential work designated professions, stricter limits on fiat currency creation, an eventual reduction in relative size of the debt bubble.

climate change will be taken more seriously too.
 

BmoreGorilla

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Personally I’m looking forward to it. I think a lot of positive changes will come from this. Obviously that might take some time tho becuz a lot of people will be shell shocked from this. We are gonna have to ease back into our normal lives and certain things will never be the same but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. One thing I do see happening is that there will be huge restrictions put in place on how many people can be in an establishment at one time. Clubs as we know it might be a thing of the past. It’ll be interesting to see how many people actually attend football games this fall
 

151_Pr00f

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Can you explain the concept behind this?

Basically as more jobs become automated and more people are out if work a basic monthly income to keep the economy grinding. The reasoning behind it is If people are displaced by robots then the products and services provided by automation wouldn't be able to be purchased by a large portion of the population, as those folks can no longer generate a steady income. That being said there are different ways governments could implement UBI but its more or less inevitable if business is moving in the direction of automation.
 
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Rell Lauren

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I don’t think there will be a big boom during quarantine but the first month after quarantine is lifted will see mad babies in 9 months.

Disagree with the baby boom theory. This isn't WW2 or the Great Depression where people were ordered on lockdown; specifically WW2 where people were working to support the war effort and fighting. Between the rise in divorces and domestic violence globally, we are going to see similar here.

Post lockdown, we are going to see a different society. In a variety of ways. I don't think we'll be headed back to what we knew as normal.
 

xCivicx

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Saying the internet needs to regulated is one of the dumbest not takes in recent history
 
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