![]() Italy: 20 Nobels, 59 million people = 0.34 Nobels / million Netherlands: 18 Nobels, 16.4 million people = 1.1 Nobels / million Norway: 11 Nobels, 4.7 million people = 2.34 Nobels / million Sweden: 28 Nobels, 9.2 million people = 3.05 Nobels / million ![]() Switzerland: 25 Nobels, 7.5 million people = 3.33 Nobels / million United Kingdom: 114 Nobels, 61 million people = 1.87 Nobels / million United States: 304 Nobels, 304 million people = 1 Nobel / million "the predominantly Christian United States produces more science per capita than any of the many more secular nations"Ī quick breakdown of the wikipedia Nobel laureate information ( ): Because of the presumption that if you are male you are good at math and science, a lot of males coast through their degrees. See, the one thing the sex discrimination of maths and sciences does (and please don't presume that I think this makes it all good!) is that generally only the best and brightest women overcome the discrimination. You know, I've met plenty of CS graduates that couldn't program "Hello, World" if their life depended on it. "The idea of biology classes being taught by lesbian professors who believe that heterosexual procreation is a myth or calculus courses being taught by women who can't do long division may sound impossible today, but tell that to any software developer, and he'll be able to provide you with plenty of current examples of computer science engineers, some with advanced CS degrees, who have no idea how to even begin writing a computer program." Pax Dickinson's account of leading a Rolling Stone blogger on a wild goose chase had me rolling.OH, I love the part where the idiot says: Not when the book ended, but the appendix. For the time being, the solutions for the average person and business owner are presented well in this book from someone with a bunch of experience.Īlso, side note, while this is usually said about books you don't like: my favorite part was the end. Hopefully the businesses and the culture of America will learn that at some point. It is, ironically, the antithesis of justice. Social Justice is a vile scourge that very obviously destroys productivity and efficiency, and it does so with pride. But such is the nature of American corporate culture at the moment and the way Vox dissects it is as humorous as it is educational. For this thesis to be revelatory in any way to any business in what is, for now, the world's largest economy is and has been shocking. ![]() ![]() The thesis is that it's a bad idea for a business to ban, censor, speak down to and/or mistreat its customers and employees. Well done all around.Īs a long time supporter of Vox Day and Owen Benjamin, and someone with first hand experience of corporate cancer, this book was cathartic. ![]() It is an effective and pleasant way to occupy those left over cognitive resources unused during normal reading, thereby fully engaging the reader. The exhaustive method has its value but I personally prefer the succinct style Corporate Cancer is written in, giving the minimum examples necessary for a firm grasp of the concept, with a delivery that through exercise of sound logic allows for extrapolation of one extra layer of meaning away from the core principles. Some books, especially those dealing with controversial matters, can be written in an almost encyclopedic way, penetrating every nook of their subject and anticipating all objections. Because it makes it appropriate for the people who need to read it most, which are very busy business people. One of its great qualities is its brevity. unchristian nature, to put it politely.īy the end of the book Vox substantiates and justifies the apt comparison made at first between convergence and cancer. He shows through various case studies how convergence negatively impacts a business' finances, productivity, and image, through diverting a company's resources away from performing its primary and indispensable function-to deliver goods/services to clients in exchange for money-towards engaging in fatal political activism of an. He dwells only the bare minimum on how to diagnose convergence but doesn't leave the curious reader without recourse because he has already completed 2 excellent entries in The Laws of Social Justice trilogy expounding what is a sjw or how they function. Vox Day succeeds at separating his bias and opinions from the objective and material economic reality of the sjw occupation of corporations through infiltration, and their repurposing for social justice activism. Corporate Cancer sheds light on the pervasive yet insidious phenomenon of sjw convergence. ![]()
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