May 2021 Blog Statistics 2021-06-04

This is an update on my monthly blog stats generated with my non-tracking The BlogStatViewer program. I followed the same steps as in April post for refining the updates to make sure that bots/spiders/etc aren’t in the statistics. This month it took a grand even less time although I’m still having to filter out about a half dozen new bot IPs again.

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Movie Review: Dream Horse (2020) (With Spoilers) 2021-06-04

“Dream Horse” (2020) follow the a small Welsh town’s naive attempt to make a go at breeding a race horse and having some beginner’s luck thanks to the pioneering efforts of their local animal loving barkeep.

Dream Horse (2020) Movie Art

(SPOILERS BELOW)

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Movie Review: Mortal Kombat (2021) (With Spoilers) 2021-06-04

“Mortal Kombat” (2021) is the latest action movie based on the popular video game of the same name. This time we see an MMA fighter and some new found friends protecting Earthrealm from the Outerworld villains who wish to rule over all of humanity

Mortal Kombat (2021) Movie Art

(SPOILERS BELOW)

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Movie Review: A Quiet Place II (2021) (With Spoilers) 2021-05-30

“A Quiet Place II” (2021) is the sequel to the blockbuster “A Quiet Place”. We pick up right at the end of the last movie and see the main character family trying to make their way out into the world without getting killed by the aliens who turned it into a apocalyptic hell hole in the first place.

A Quiet Place II (2021) Movie Art

(SPOILERS BELOW)

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Movie Review: Godzilla vs. Kong (2021) 2021-05-28

“Godzilla vs. Kong” (2021) two of the world’s Titan monsters battle it out with each other as the world waits to figure out who is the real villain and who is the real savior.

Godzilla vs. Kong (2021) Movie Art
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Movie Review: Limbo (2020) (With Spoilers) 2021-05-26

“Limbo” (2020) covers the story of a Syrian immigrant stuck in the asylum process in Scotland along with several other asylum seekers from around the world.

Limbo(2020) Movie Art

(SPOILERS BELOW)

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Movie Review: The Water Man (2020) (With Spoilers) 2021-05-25

“The Water Man” (2020) is an American drama about a teenage boy finds out that the legends of a local immortal may turn out to be more than just legend so goes off to find this creature in one last ditch effort to cure his dying mom.

The Water Man (2020) Movie Art

(SPOILERS BELOW)

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Movie Review: Nobody (2021) (With Spoilers) 2021-05-24

“Nobody” (2021) is an American action movie where we see what happens when a wussy American dad turns out to be a bad-ass.

Nobody (2021) Movie Art

(SPOILERS BELOW)

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Movie Review: Fatima (2020) 2021-05-24

“Fatima” (2020) is a movie about the events around a supposed series of Virgin Maria appearances to three small children in the small Portuguese village of Fatima.

Fatima (2020) Movie Art
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Getting into 'Capitalism 2.0' 2021-05-20
Cooperative artwork, connected hands

License: CC0, Source: https://www.maxpixel.net/Together-Hands-Team-People-Unity-United-Teamwork-1917895

For years now, the concentration of wealth and power into too few hands has bothered me. That it gets progressively worse with so little action to address this is even more troubling. Why? Because such lopsidedness creates an inherently unstable system state. Historically, even the most resilient of systems break when wealth inequality becomes unsustainable. Increasingly, the have-nots resent being forced into a system in which the barriers to success are so high. Nonetheless, these trends continue.

There are those who see no issue with the status quo, and a minority may view it as morally justified. Conversely, there are others who think nothing less than a full scale teardown and replacement of the private property foundations of capitalism is what’s required. Neither of these options are viable, but there must be a way out of this mess.

I’m not big on pontification or mental exercises, though I admit someone has to fill those roles. I’m a pragmatist. I’m a fan of getting things done. While grand sweeping changes can feel better in a thought exercise, it’s more often small incremental changes that cause major lasting changes. Anyone who’s visited the Grand Canyon can attest to the power of small changes that add up to big ones over time. An obese person could lose 50 pounds by going on a diet that prescribes a mild caloric deficit and exercise over a year. They might gain the same results by getting liposuction, or, in a more drastic example, by amputating a limb. That last one obviously serves as an example of emphasizing the wrong parameter—and profoundly so. The point is, the small incremental changes can lead to bigger ones, and often with less overall turmoil. Additionally, small changes over time become a habit, a way of being in the world with an assumed set of priorities and assumptions that become self-reinforcing. Now, those changes naturally resist reversion to the old attitudes that caused so many problems in the first place.

Accepting this as a foundational principle, I thought hard about it for a while and read a few hopeful anecdotes, but only recently was I introduced to a world of people taking this incremental approach regarding ownership of the economy. This approach isn’t some theoretical, historical, or “unicorn” idea. It’s a real thing at work in the world at this very moment. It is a concept of distributed ownership of companies some call “Capitalism 2.0”. It’s about using cooperative corporate structures to put real power in the hands of a company’s workers, customers, content producers, or the communities built around that company.

While this approach is gaining momentum, it doesn’t yet have critical mass, and it hasn’t become the default economic model, a fact made obvious by a continually widening wealth gap. If this model—one of distributed ownership—solves so many problems, why hasn’t it prevailed? What would allow it to do so? Those are some things I want to explore more and discuss a bit here.

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