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richardstevenhack's avatar

"The oil crisis is temporary. "

Only if the US loses the war. Which, while quite possible (even likely), is not certain.

The entire point of this war (as well taking control of Venezuela) is to deny China oil and thus cripple its economy (although they can replace a certain amount from Russia, with Russia deciding to deny more of its oil to Europe, which is hostile to it.)

Of course, there's also the reason Trump explicitly said: "When the price of oil rises, we make a lot of money."

So the oil shock may continue for quite a while, because the US can't afford to let Iran win, and Iran can't afford to let the US win. And Iran can fight for a longer time than the Taliban could in Afghanistan - which you'll recall was twenty years. For Iran, this is an existential fight and they will never surrender.

The US can't prevent the Straits from being closed. Trump begging the EU for additional ships won't work. The few LCS ships assigned to mine-clearing have never been used in that role and can't be protected from precision Iranian missiles. The Navy's older mine-clearing ships (many of them wooden) have been sent for dismantling.

So unless the US backs down or Iran is fully defeated (neither likely), this war could go on for years.

See Brian Berletic's detailed analysis of the situation on his YouTube channel:

https://www.youtube.com/@TheNewAtlas/videos

As for why the "tech bros" want everyone back to work, well, that's pretty obvious. You can't act as a "feudal lord" unless your peasants can see you. Ordering people around is why people become CEOs in the first place. An "employee" is just another term for "peasant."

forumposter123@protonmail.com's avatar

Return to Work goes far beyond a few tech billionaires.

It was rolled out in industry after industry once the labor market wasn't tight anymore, and was clearly a way companies felt they could do layoffs that weren't layoffs when they found they had overhired during the pandemic (itself a result of money printing sending a false signal to employers).

So while taking a swipe at Musk is fun, it's really beside the point. CEOs that have never said a thing about pro-natalism are just as likely to mandate return to office.

I don't know whether stealth layoffs or CEO office dynamics are the big drivers here. And I'm hesitant to force employers into specific work arrangements, though I tell anyone I know to go remote. I do think there might be a role for financial incentives (calculate commuting costs impact on infrastructure and offer that as a tax break to remote work companies).

P.S. Nearly every pro-natalist I know supports WFH, so it doesn't do much good to tie the entire thing to Musk's eccentricities.

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