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O país dos reformados ricos mas sem netos

27 Novembro, 2013

Dinheiro é a principal razão para casais não terem mais filhos

Se querem evitar segundo resgate, aumentem impostos a toda a gente” –Maria do Rosário Gama, presidente da Associação de Aposentados, Pensionistas e Reformados, rejeitando novos cortes nas reformas

102 comentários leave one →
  1. Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira's avatar
    Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 13:35

    O João Miranda, por assim dizer, tirou-me as palavras da boca. Por acaso hoje chegou-me às mãos a entrevista que a senhora deu ao Sol onde vem essa pérola. De resto já aqui tinha falado nisso num comentário de há uns dias atrás. Uma pessoa que recebe uma reforma superior a três mil euros, vem exigir que se aumentem os impostos a TODOS OS PORTUGUESES como alternativa a um corte de 10% na sua imerecida prebenda. Vergonha? ZERO!!!!

    Gostar

    • 7anaz's avatar
      7anaz permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 15:40

      Isto é mais do que uma luta entre gerações, que também o sendo, é principalmente uma luta entre reformados da CGA (Caixa Geral de Aposentações) e do CNP (Centro Nacional de Pensões), ou, como dizem os nossos amigos das terras de Vera Cruz, entre os “barriga cheia” e os “pés rapados”.

      Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 18:16

        NÃO NÃO É UMA LUTA ENTRE GERAÇÕES
        OS VELHADAS GANHARAM EM TODA A LINHA BASTA VER A TAXA DE MORTALIDADE EM ALGUMAS CLASSES ETÁRIAS

        É UMA GUERRA COM MUITAS BAIXAS MAS OS VELHADAS MESMO COM PENSÕES DE 174 EUROS SOBREVIVEM MELHOR QUE OS DESEMPREGADOS DOS TRINTA E POUCOS AOS SESSENTA E MUITOS QUE ANDAM AOS CAIXOTES DE LIXO

        IL’S MANGE NA POUBÉLEEE DIRIA SOUÁREZ…

        SE ILS MANGENT DANS LA POUBELLE OU CES FAMILLES QUI MANGENT DANS LES POUBELLES SÃO GAROTOS SEGUNDO SOARES
        OU SÃO GENTE ALQUEBRADA QUE NEM 100 EUROS POR MÊS CONSEGUEM ARRANJAR OU SE COMEM NO LIXO POR MANIA ISSO A GENTE NÃO SABE…..MAS OS REFORMADOS QUE ANDAM NESSE MESTER SÃO RELATIVAMENTE RAROS

        POIS UMA VANTAGEM DA GERAÇÃO VELHADAS É QUE PODEM PEDIR

        SE BEM QUE ESTEJAMOS MELHOR QUE A BULGÁRIA E O SUL DE ITÁLIA

        JÁ PARECEMOS O SUL DE FRANÇA CHEIO DE CLOCHARDS E DE NEEDLE WORSHIPER’S PODEMOS AINDA ESTAR LONGE DO NÍVEL DE VIDA DOS ANOS 80 MAS A PAISAGEM É SIMILAR….

        AGORA DENTRO DA CLASSE VELHADAS HÁ DUAS SUB-CASTAS

        OS REFORMADOS A MENOS DE 3000 POR ANO…..

        E OS REFORMADOS A MAIS DE DEZ MILENAS POR ANO….

        E SE BEM QUE UMA REFORMA DE ESCASSAS OITO CENTENAS OU DE UM MILHAR E MEIO POR MÊS NÃO SEJA MUITO

        É MUITO MAIS DO QUE A MAIORIA DA POPULAÇA TEM PARA COMER DURANTE MESES A FIO….

        NÃO NÃO SOMOS NÁPOLES
        MAS A TRAFARIA E O ALFEITE JÁ PARECEM NAPOLITANOS DESDE 2008

        O PESSOAL É QUE NÃO TEM REPARADO…

        Gostar

      • RCAS's avatar
        RCAS permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 22:08

        Ó und estou farto de te avisar: quando comentas, NÃO ABANES A CABEÇA!!!

        Gostar

      • Mario Braga's avatar
        27 Novembro, 2013 22:39

        pois no teu caso és acéfalo logo só abanas o rabo….

        a con tece….

        Gostar

      • Mario Braga's avatar
        28 Novembro, 2013 02:32
        veja-se o caso do rcash e da relatividade dos processos cognitivos….. The principle of linguistic relativity holds that the structure of a language affects the ways in which its respective speakers conceptualize their world, i.e. their world view, or otherwise influences their cognitive processes. Popularly known as the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, or Whorfianism, the principle is often defined as having two versions: (i) the strong version that language determines thought and that linguistic categories limit and determine cognitive categories and (ii) the weak version that linguistic categories and usage influence thought and certain kinds of non-linguistic behaviour. The term “Sapir–Whorf Hypothesis” is a misnomer, as Edward Sapir and Benjamin Lee Whorf never co-authored anything, and never stated their ideas in terms of a hypothesis. The distinction between a weak and a strong version of the hypothesis is also a later invention, as Sapir and Whorf never set up such a dichotomy, although often in their writings their views of this relativity principle are phrased in stronger or weaker terms. The idea was first clearly expressed by 19th-century thinkers, such as Wilhelm von Humboldt, who saw language as the expression of the spirit of a nation. Members of the early 20th-century school of American anthropology headed by Franz Boas and Edward Sapir also embraced forms of the idea to one extent or another, but Sapir in particular wrote more often against than in favor of anything like linguistic determinism. Sapir’s student Benjamin Lee Whorf came to be seen as the primary proponent as a result of his published observations of how he perceived linguistic differences to have consequences in human cognition and behavior. Harry Hoijer, one of Sapir’s students, introduced the term “Sapir–Whorf hypothesis”, even though the two scholars never actually advanced any such hypothesis. A strong version of relativist theory was developed from the late 1920s by the German linguist Leo Weisgerber. Whorf’s principle of linguistic relativity was reformulated as a testable hypothesis by Roger Brown and Eric Lenneberg who conducted experiments designed to find out whether color perception varies between speakers of languages that classified colors differently. As the study of the universal nature of human language and cognition came into focus in the 1960s the idea of linguistic relativity fell out of favour among linguists. A 1969 study by Brent Berlin and Paul Kay demonstrated the existence of universal semantic constraints in the field of color terminology which was widely seen to discredit the existence of linguistic relativity in this domain, although this conclusion has been disputed by relativist researchers. From the late 1980s a new school of linguistic relativity scholars have examined the effects of differences in linguistic categorization on cognition, finding broad support for non-deterministic versions of the hypothesis in experimental contexts. Some effects of linguistic relativity have been shown in several semantic domains, although they are generally weak. Currently, a balanced view of linguistic relativity is espoused by most linguists holding that language influences certain kinds of cognitive processes in non-trivial ways, but that other processes are better seen as subject to universal factors. Research is focused on exploring the ways and extent to which language influences thought. The principle of linguistic relativity and the relation between language and thought has also received attention in varying academic fields from philosophy to psychology and anthropology, and it has also inspired and colored works of fiction and the invention of constructed languages. Definitional issues and debates[edit] The concept of linguistic relativity describes formulations of the principle that cognitive processes, such as thought and experience, may be influenced by the categories and patterns of the language a person speaks. Empirical research into the question has been associated mainly with the names of Benjamin Lee Whorf, who wrote on the topic in the 1930s, and his mentor Edward Sapir, who did not himself write extensively on the topic. Whorf’s writings became the focus of empirical studies in psychology in the mid 20th century, and this strand of research often referred to the question as the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis, or sometimes the Whorfian hypothesis. This usage has been criticized as a misnomer, since Sapir and Whorf did not in fact formulate a hypothesis for empirical research, and because it is unclear to what extent Sapir actually subscribed to the idea of language influencing thought. Currently, researchers prefer to use Whorf’s own terminology, by referring to the principle of linguistic relativity. This formulation implicitly acknowledges that Sapir and Whorf were not the first or only scholars to have theorized about relations between language and thought and that other strands of thinking about the issue also exist. Linguistic determinism[edit] Main article: linguistic determinism A main point of debate in the discussion of linguistic relativity is the correlation between language and thought. The strongest form of correlation is linguistic determinism, which would hold that language entirely determines the range of possible cognitive processes of an individual. This view has sometimes been attributed to Benjamin Lee Whorf, and to Ludwig Wittgenstein, but it is not currently the consensus that either of these thinkers actually espoused determinist views of the relation between language and thought. Linguistic determinism is also sometimes described as “the strong Sapir-Whorf hypothesis”, while other forms of correlation are referred to as “the weak Sapir-Whorf hypothesis”. The notion of “weak” and “strong” versions of Whorf’s principle of linguistic relativity is a misunderstanding of Whorf promulgated by Stuart Chase, whom Whorf considered “utterly incompetent by training and background to handle such a subject.” Neither Sapir nor Whorf ever suggested a distinction between weak or strong versions of their views. The hypothesis of linguistic determinism is now generally agreed to be false, but weaker forms of correlation are still being studied by many researchers, often producing positive empirical evidence for a correlation. Relation to debates in science and philosophy[edit] The question bears on many significant philosophical, psychological, linguistic and anthropological debates. A major question of debate is of whether human psychological faculties are mostly universal and innate or whether they are mostly a result of learning, and hence subject to cultural and social processes that vary between places and times. The universalist view holds that all humans share the same set of basic faculties, and that variability due to cultural differences is negligible. This position often sees the human mind as a mostly biological construction, so that all humans sharing the same neurological configuration can be expected to have similar or identical basic cognitive patterns. The contrary position can be described as constructivist, stating that human faculties and concepts are largely influenced by socially constructed and learned categories, that is not subject to many biological restrictions. Or it can be described as idealist, holding that the human mental capacities are generally unrestricted by its biological-material basis. And it can be described as essentialist, holding that there may be essential differences in the ways individuals or groups experience and conceptualize the world. It may also be described as relativist, basically a kind of Cultural relativism, which sees different cultural groups as having different conceptual schemes that are not necessarily compatible or commensurable, nor more or less in accord with the external reality. Another debate that bears on the debate is the question about the relation between language and thought. Some philosophers and psychologists have tended to understand thought as basically a form of internal speech, suggesting that either this speech must be innate or thought has to be learned while acquiring language. Others have understood thought, understood as experience and reason, to be independent of and before language. In the philosophy of language the debate has relevance for the question of the relation between language, knowledge and the external world, and the concept of truth. Some philosophers (e.g. Putnam, Fodor, Davidson, Dennett) see language as representing directly entities that already exist in the objective world, and that categorization is therefore not generally variable but to some extent pre-given. Other philosophers (e.g. Wittgenstein, Quine, Searle, Foucault) argue that categorization and conceptualization is learned and basically arbitrary, and that the objects in the world can be categorized in multiple ways, giving rise to different ways of describing or understanding the same phenomena. Philosophers also vary in the question of whether language is basically a tool for representing and referring to objects in the world, or whether it is a system used to construct mental representations of the world that can be shared and circulated between people. Because of the centrality of the question of the relation between thought and language to these debates, the issue of linguistic relativity has received attention not only from linguists and psychologists, but from anthropologists, philosophers, literary theorists and political scientists. History[edit] The idea that language and thought are intertwined goes back to the classical civilizations. Famously Plato argued against sophist thinkers such as Gorgias of Leontini, who held the physical world cannot be experienced except through language, this meant that for Gorgias the question of truth was dependent on aesthetic preferences or functional consequences. Contrary to this idea Plato held that the world consisted in pregiven eternal ideas and that language in order to be true should strive to reflect these ideas as accurately as possible. Following Plato, St. Augustine, for example, held the view that language was merely labels applied to already existing concepts, and this view remained prevalent throughout the Middle Ages. Others held the opinion that language was but a veil covering up the eternal truths hiding them from real human experience. For Immanuel Kant, language was but one of several tools used by humans to experience the world. German Romantic philosophers[edit] Wilhelm von Humboldt In the late 18th and early 19th century the idea of the existence of different national characters, or “Volksgeister”, of different ethnic groups was the moving force behind the German school of national romanticism and the beginning ideologies of ethnic nationalism. In 1820, Wilhelm von Humboldt connected the study of language to the national romanticist program by proposing the view that language is the very fabric of thought. That is, thoughts are produced as a kind of internal dialog using the same grammar as the thinker’s native language. This view was part of a larger picture in which the world view of an ethnic nation, their “Weltanschauung”, was seen as being faithfully reflected in the grammar of their language. Von Humboldt argued that languages with an inflectional morphological type, such as German, English and the other Indo-European languages were the most perfect languages and that accordingly this explained the dominance of their speakers over the speakers of less perfect languages. Wilhelm von Humboldt declared in 1820: The diversity of languages is not a diversity of signs and sounds but a diversity of views of the world. Boas and Sapir[edit] Franz Boas Edward Sapir The idea that some languages were naturally superior to others and that the use of primitive languages maintained their speakers in intellectual poverty was widespread in the early 20th century. The American linguist William Dwight Whitney, for example, actively strove to eradicate the Native American languages arguing that their speakers were savages and would be better off abandoning their languages and learning English and adopting a civilized way of life. The first anthropologist and linguist to challenge this view was Franz Boas who was educated in Germany in the late 19th century where he received his doctorate in physics. While undertaking geographical research in northern Canada he became fascinated with the Inuit people and decided to become an ethnographer. In contrast to von Humboldt, Boas always stressed the equal worth of all cultures and languages, and argued that there was no such thing as primitive languages, but that all languages were capable of expressing the same content albeit by widely differing means. Boas saw language as an inseparable part of culture and he was among the first to require of ethnographers to learn the native language of the culture being studied, and to document verbal culture such as myths and legends in the original language. According to Franz Boas: It does not seem likely […] that there is any direct relation between the culture of a tribe and the language they speak, except in so far as the form of the language will be moulded by the state of the culture, but not in so far as a certain state of the culture is conditioned by the morphological traits of the language.” Boas’ student Edward Sapir reached back to the Humboldtian idea that languages contained the key to understanding the differing world views of peoples. In his writings he espoused the viewpoint that because of the staggering differences in the grammatical systems of languages no two languages were ever similar enough to allow for perfect translation between them. Sapir also thought because language represented reality differently, it followed that the speakers of different languages would perceive reality differently. According to Edward Sapir: No two languages are ever sufficiently similar to be considered as representing the same social reality. The worlds in which different societies live are distinct worlds, not merely the same world with different labels attached. On the other hand, Sapir explicitly rejected strong linguistic determinism by stating, “It would be naïve to imagine that any analysis of experience is dependent on pattern expressed in language.” Sapir was explicit that the connections between language and culture were neither thoroughgoing nor particularly deep, if they existed at all: It is easy to show that language and culture are not intrinsically associated. Totally unrelated languages share in one culture; closely related languages—even a single language—belong to distinct culture spheres. There are many excellent examples in Aboriginal America. The Athabaskan languages form as clearly unified, as structurally specialized, a group as any that I know of. The speakers of these languages belong to four distinct culture areas… The cultural adaptability of the Athabaskan-speaking peoples is in the strangest contrast to the inaccessibility to foreign influences of the languages themselves. Sapir offers similar observations about speakers of so-called “world” or “modern” languages, noting that “possession of a common language is still and will continue to be a smoother of the way to a mutual understanding between England and America, but it is very clear that other factors, some of them rapidly cumulative, are working powerfully to counteract this leveling influence. A common language cannot indefinitely set the seal on a common culture when the geographical, physical, and economics determinants of the culture are no longer the same throughout the area.” While Sapir never made a point of studying directly how languages affected the thought processes of their speakers, some notion of (probably “weak”) linguistic relativity lay inherent in his basic understanding of language, and would be taken up by his student Benjamin Lee Whorf. Drawing on influences such as Humboldt or Friedrich Nietzsche some European thinkers developed similar ideas to those of Sapir and Whorf, generally working in isolation from one another. Prominent in Germany from the late 1920s through into the 1960s were the strongly relativist theories of Leo Weisgerber and his key concept of a ‘linguistic inter-world’, mediating between external reality and the forms of a given language, in ways peculiar to that language. Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky read Sapir’s work and experimentally studied the ways in which the development of concepts in children was influenced by structures given in language. His theories and results were published in 1934 as “Thought and Language” Vygotsky’s ideas have been compared to Whorf’s and taken as mutually supportive evidence of language’s influence on cognition. Drawing on Nietzsche’s ideas of perspectivism Alfred Korzybski developed the theory of general semantics which has been compared to Whorf’s notions of linguistic relativity. Though influential in their own right, these strands of research have not been given much attention in the debate surrounding linguistic relativity, which has tended to center on the American paradigm exemplified by Sapir and Whorf. Benjamin Lee Whorf[edit] Main article: Benjamin Lee Whorf More than any other linguist, Benjamin Lee Whorf has become associated with what he called “the principle of linguistic relativity”. Instead of merely assuming that language influences the thought and behavior of its speakers (after Humboldt and Sapir) he looked at Native American languages and attempted to account for the ways in which differences in grammatical systems and language use affected the way their speakers perceived the world. Whorf was also concerned with how a scientific account of the world differed to such an extent from a religious account, which led him to study the languages of old religious scripture and to write several anti-evolutionist pamphlets There is not a lot of agreement about Whorf’s opinions regarding the nature of the relation between language and thought. One tradition of interpretation, exemplified by his critics such as Eric Lenneberg, Max Black and Steven Pinker, attributes to Whorf a very strong view of linguistic determinism, according to which commensuration between conceptual schemes and translation between languages are impossible. Another tradition of interpretation, exemplified in the work of linguists including John A. Lucy, Michael Silverstein and Stephen C. Levinson, points to the many places in Whorf’s writings where he explicitly rejects determinism, and where he clearly notes that translation and commensuration between linguistic conceptual schemes is possible. This line of interpretation suggests that a more sympathetic reading of Whorf would lead to a greater understanding of the subtleties in Whorf’s use of terminology and consequently to resolving some of the apparent contradictions noted by Whorf’s critics. Whorf has sometimes been dismissed as an ‘amateur’ because of his lack of an advanced degree in linguistics. However, his not having a degree in linguistics cannot be taken to mean that he was linguistically incompetent. The reputation he had during his lifetime belies this idea: his academic peers at Yale University considered the ‘amateur’ Whorf to be the best man available to take over Sapir’s graduate seminar in Native American linguistics while Sapir was on sabbatical in 1937–38. He was highly regarded by authorities such as Boas, Sapir, Leonard Bloomfield and Alfred M. Tozzer. Indeed, John A. Lucy writes: “despite his ‘amateur’ status, Whorf’s work in linguistics was and still is recognized as being of superb professional quality by linguists”. Still, detractors such as Eric Lenneberg, Noam Chomsky and Steven Pinker have criticized him for not being sufficiently clear in his formulation of how he meant language influences thought, and for not providing actual proof for his conjectures. Most of his arguments were in the form of examples that were anecdotal or speculative in nature, and functioned as attempts to show how ‘exotic’ grammatical traits were connected to what were apparently equally exotic worlds of thought. In Whorf’s words: We dissect nature along lines laid down by our native language. The categories and types that we isolate from the world of phenomena we do not find there because they stare every observer in the face; on the contrary, the world is presented in a kaleidoscope flux of impressions which has to be organized by our minds—and this means largely by the linguistic systems of our minds. We cut nature up, organize it into concepts, and ascribe significances as we do, largely because we are parties to an agreement to organize it in this way—an agreement that holds throughout our speech community and is codified in the patterns of our language […] all observers are not led by the same physical evidence to the same picture of the universe, unless their linguistic backgrounds are similar, or can in some way be calibrated. Whorf’s illustration of the difference between the English and Shawnee gestalt construction of cleaning a gun with a ramrod. From the article “Language and Science”, originally published in the MIT Technology Review, 1940. Image copyright of MIT Press. Among Whorf’s best-known examples of linguistic relativity are instances where an indigenous language has several terms for a concept that is only described with one word in English and other European languages (Whorf used the acronym SAE “Standard Average European” to allude to the rather similar grammatical structures of the well-studied European languages in contrast to the greater diversity of the less-studied languages). One of Whorf’s examples of this phenomenon was the supposedly large number of words for ‘snow’ in the Inuit language, an example which some have later contested as a misrepresentation. Another of Whorf’s examples are the Hopi language words for water, one indicating drinking water in a container and another indicating a natural body of water. These examples of polysemy served the double purpose of showing that indigenous languages sometimes made more fine grained semantic distinctions than European languages and that direct translation between two languages, even of seemingly basic concepts like snow or water, is not always possible. Another example in which Whorf attempted to show that language use affects behavior came from his experience in his day job as a chemical engineer working for an insurance company as a fire inspector. On inspecting a chemical plant he once observed that the plant had two storage rooms for gasoline barrels, one for the full barrels and one for the empty ones. He further noticed that while no employees smoked cigarettes in the room for full barrels, no-one minded smoking in the room with empty barrels, although this was potentially much more dangerous because of the highly flammable vapors that still existed in the barrels. He concluded that the use of the word empty in connection to the barrels had led the workers to unconsciously regard them as harmless, although consciously they were probably aware of the risk of explosion from the vapors. This example was later criticized by Lenneberg as not actually demonstrating causality between the use of the word empty and the action of smoking, but instead being an example of circular reasoning. Steven Pinker in The Language Instinct ridiculed this example, claiming that this was a failing of human insight rather than language. Whorf’s most elaborate argument for the existence of linguistic relativity regarded what he believed to be a fundamental difference in the understanding of time as a conceptual category among the Hopi. He argued that in contrast to English and other SAE languages, the Hopi language does not treat the flow of time as a sequence of distinct, countable instances, like “three days” or “five years,” but rather as a single process and that consequentially it does not have nouns referring to units of time as SAE speakers understand them. He proposed that this view of time was fundamental in all aspects of Hopi culture and explained certain Hopi behavioral patterns. However, later Malotki (1983), who researched Hopi, claimed that he found no evidence of Whorf’s claims in 1980’s era speakers, nor in historical documents going back to the preconquest era. Malotki used evidence from archaeological data, calendars, historical documents, modern speech and concluded that there was no evidence that Hopi conceptualize time the way Whorf suggests. Universalist scholars such as Steven Pinker often see Malotki’s study as a final refutation of Whorf’s claim about Hopi, whereas relativist scholars such as John A Lucy and Penny Lee have criticized Malotki’s study for mischaracterizing Whorf’s claims and for forcing Hopi grammar into a pregiven model of analysis that doesn’t fit the data. Whorf died in 1941 at age 44 and left behind a number of unpublished papers. His line of thought was continued by linguists and anthropologists such as Harry Hoijer and Dorothy D. Lee who both continued investigations into the effect of language on habitual thought, and George L. Trager who prepared a number of Whorf’s left-behind papers for publishing. The most important event for the dissemination of Whorf’s ideas to a larger public was the publication in 1956 of his major writings on the topic of linguistic relativity in a single volume titled Language, Thought and Reality, edited by J. B. Carroll. Eric Lenneberg[edit] In 1953 psychologist Eric Lenneberg published a detailed criticism of the line of thought that had been fundamental for Sapir and Whorf. He criticized Whorf’s examples from an objectivist view of language holding that languages are principally meant to represent events in the real world and that even though different languages express these ideas in different ways, the meanings of such expressions and therefore the thoughts of the speaker are equivalent. He argued that when Whorf was describing in English how a Hopi speaker’s view of time was different, he was in fact translating the Hopi concept into English and therefore disproving the existence of linguistic relativity. He did not address the fact that Whorf was not principally concerned with translatability, but rather with how the habitual use of language influences habitual behavior. Whorf’s point was that while English speakers may be able to understand how a Hopi speaker thinks, they are not actually able to think in that way. Lenneberg’s main criticism of Whorf’s works was that he had never actually shown the causality between a linguistic phenomenon and a phenomenon in the realm of thought or behavior, but merely assumed it to be there. Together with his colleague, Roger Brown, Lenneberg proposed that in order to prove such a causality one would have to be able to directly correlate linguistic phenomena with behavior. They took up the task of proving or disproving the existence of linguistic relativity experimentally and published their findings in 1954. Since neither Sapir nor Whorf had ever stated an actual hypothesis, Brown and Lenneberg formulated one based on a condensation of the different expressions of the notion of linguistic relativity in their works. They identified the two tenets of the Whorf thesis as (i) “the world is differently experienced and conceived in different linguistic communities” and (ii) “language causes a particular cognitive structure”. These two tenets were later developed by Roger Brown into the so-called “weak” and “strong” formulation respectively: 1. Structural differences between language systems will, in general, be paralleled by nonlinguistic cognitive differences, of an unspecified sort, in the native speakers of the language. 2. The structure of anyone’s native language strongly influences or fully determines the worldview he will acquire as he learns the language. It is these two formulations of Roger Brown’s which have become widely known and attributed to Whorf and Sapir while in fact the second formulation, verging on linguistic determinism, was never advanced by either of them. Since Brown and Lenneberg believed that the objective reality denoted by language was the same for speakers of all languages, they decided to test how different languages codified the same message differently and whether differences in codification could be proven to affect behavior. They designed a number of experiments involving the codification of colors. In their first experiment, they investigated whether it was easier for speakers of English to remember color shades for which they had a specific name than to remember colors that were not as easily definable by words. This allowed them to correlate the linguistic categorization directly to a non-linguistic task, that of recognizing and remembering colors. In a later experiment, speakers of two languages that categorize colors differently (English and Zuni) were asked to perform tasks of color recognition. In this way, it could be determined whether the differing color categories of the two speakers would determine their ability to recognize nuances within color categories. Brown and Lenneberg in fact found that Zuñi speakers who classify green and blue together as a single category did have trouble recognizing and remembering nuances within the green/blue category. Brown and Lenneberg’s study became the beginning of a tradition of investigation of the linguistic relativity through color terminology (see below). The universalist period[edit] Main article: Universalism and relativism of color terminology Lenneberg was also one of the first cognitive scientists to begin development of the Universalist theory of language which was finally formulated by Noam Chomsky in the form of Universal Grammar, effectively arguing that all languages share the same underlying structure. The Chomskyan school also holds the belief that linguistic structures are largely innate and that what are perceived as differences between specific languages – the knowledge acquired by learning a language – are merely surface phenomena and do not affect cognitive processes that are universal to all human beings. This theory became the dominant paradigm in American linguistics from the 1960s through the 1980s and the notion of linguistic relativity fell out of favor and became even the object of ridicule. An example of the influence of universalist theory in the 1960s is the studies by Brent Berlin and Paul Kay who continued Lenneberg’s research in color terminology. Berlin and Kay studied color terminology formation in languages and showed clear universal trends in color naming. For example, they found that even though languages have different color terminologies, they generally recognize certain hues as more focal than others. They showed that in languages with few color terms, it is predictable from the number of terms which hues are chosen as focal colors, for example, languages with only three color terms always have the focal colors black, white and red. The fact that what had been believed to be random differences between color naming in different languages could be shown to follow universal patterns was seen as a powerful argument against linguistic relativity. Berlin and Kay’s research has since been criticized by relativists such as John A. Lucy, who has argued that Berlin and Kay’s conclusions were skewed by their insistence that color terms should encode only color information. This, Lucy argues, made them blind to the instances in which color terms provided other information that might be considered examples of linguistic relativity. Other universalist researchers dedicated themselves to dispelling other notions of linguistic relativity, often attacking specific points and examples given by Whorf. For example, Ekkehart Malotki’s monumental study of time expressions in Hopi presented many examples that challenged Whorf’s interpretation of Hopi language and culture as being “timeless”. Today many followers of the universalist school of thought still oppose the idea of linguistic relativity. For example, Steven Pinker argues in his book The Language Instinct that thought is independent of language, that language is itself meaningless in any fundamental way to human thought, and that human beings do not even think in “natural” language, i.e. any language that we actually communicate in; rather, we think in a meta-language, preceding any natural language, called “mentalese.” Pinker attacks what he calls “Whorf’s radical position,” declaring, “the more you examine Whorf’s arguments, the less sense they make.” Pinker and other universalist opponents of the linguistic relativity hypothesis have been accused by relativists of misrepresenting Whorf’s views and arguing against strawmen put up by themselves. Fishman’s ‘Whorfianism of the third kind’[edit] Joshua Fishman argued that Whorf’s true position was for a long time largely overlooked by most linguists. In 1978, he suggested that Whorf was a ‘neo-Herderian champion’ and in 1982, he proposed his ‘Whorfianism of the third kind’ in an attempt to refocus linguists’ attention on what he claimed was Whorf’s real interest, namely the intrinsic value of ‘little peoples’ and ‘little languages’. Whorf had expressed the sentiment thus: But to restrict thinking to the patterns merely of English […] is to lose a power of thought which, once lost, can never be regained. It is the ‘plainest’ English which contains the greatest number of unconscious assumptions about nature. […] We handle even our plain English with much greater effect if we direct it from the vantage point of a multilingual awareness. Where Brown’s weak version of the linguistic relativity hypothesis proposes that language influences thought and the strong version that language determines thought, Fishman’s ‘Whorfianism of the third kind’ proposes that language is a key to culture. Cognitive linguistics[edit] In the late 1980s and early 1990s, advances in cognitive psychology and cognitive linguistics renewed interest in the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis. One of those who adopted a more Whorfian approach was George Lakoff. He argued that language is often used metaphorically and that languages use different cultural metaphors that reveal something about how speakers of that language think. For example, English employs metaphors likening time with money, whereas other languages may not talk about time in that fashion. Other linguistic metaphors may be common to most languages because they are based on general human experience, for example, metaphors likening up with good and bad with down. Lakoff also argues that metaphor plays an important part in political debates where it matters whether one is arguing in favor of the “right to life” or against the “right to choose”; whether one is discussing “illegal aliens” or “undocumented workers”. In his book Women, Fire and Dangerous things: What categories reveal about the mind, Lakoff reappraised the hypothesis of linguistic relativity and especially Whorf’s views about how linguistic categorization reflects and/or influences mental categories. He concluded that the debate on linguistic relativity had been confused and resultingly fruitless. He identified four parameters on which researchers differed in their opinions about what constitutes linguistic relativity. One parameter is the degree and depth of linguistic relativity. Some scholars believe that a few examples of superficial differences in language and associated behavior are enough to demonstrate the existence of linguistic relativity, while others contend that only deep differences that permeate the linguistic and cultural system suffice as proof. A second parameter is whether conceptual systems are to be seen as absolute or whether they can be expanded or exchanged during the lifetime of a human being. A third parameter is whether translatability is accepted as a proof of similarity or difference between concept systems or whether it is rather the actual habitual use of linguistic expressions that is to be examined. A fourth parameter is whether to view the locus of linguistic relativity as being in the language or in the mind. Lakoff concluded that since many of Whorf’s critics had criticized him using definitions of linguistic relativity that Whorf did not himself use, their criticisms were often ineffective. The publication of the 1996 anthology Rethinking linguistic relativity edited by sociolinguist John J. Gumperz and psycholinguist Stephen C. Levinson marked the entrance to a new period of linguistic relativity studies and a new way of defining the concept that focused on cognitive as well as social aspects of linguistic relativity. The book included studies by cognitive linguists sympathetic to the hypothesis as well as some working in the opposing universalist tradition. In this volume, cognitive and social scientists laid out a new paradigm for investigations in linguistic relativity. Levinson presented research results documenting rather significant linguistic relativity effects in the linguistic conceptualization of spatial categories between languages. Two separate studies by Melissa Bowerman and Dan I. Slobin treated the role of language in cognitive processes. Bowerman showed that certain cognitive processes did not use language to any significant extent and therefore could not be subject to effects of linguistic relativity. Slobin described another kind of cognitive process that he named “thinking for speaking” – the kind of processes in which perceptional data and other kinds of prelinguistic cognition are translated into linguistic terms for the purpose of communicating them to others. These, Slobin argues, are the kinds of cognitive process that are at the root of linguistic relativity. Present status[edit] Current researchers such as Lera Boroditsky, John A. Lucy and Stephen C. Levinson believe that language influences thought, but in more limited ways than the broadest early claims. Exploring these parameters has sparked novel research that increases both scope and precision of prior examinations. Current studies of linguistic relativity are neither marked by the naive approach to exotic linguistic structures and their often merely presumed effect on thought that marked the early period, nor are they ridiculed and discouraged as in the universalist period. Instead of proving or disproving a theory, researchers in linguistic relativity now examine the interface between thought (or cognition), language and culture, and describe the degree and kind of interrelatedness or influence. Following the tradition of Lenneberg, they use experimental data to back up their conclusions.Paul Kay, co-author of the seminal work about color naming, ultimately reached the conclusion that “[the] Whorf hypothesis is supported in the right visual field but not the left”. His findings show that taking in account brain lateralization allows another perspective on the debate. Psycholinguistic studies have gone far beyond color perception (although that is still studied), having explored motion perception, emotion perception, object representation, and memory. The gold standard of psycholinguistic studies on linguistic relativity is now finding cognitive differences in speakers of different language when no language is involved in an experimental task (thus rendering inapplicable Pinker’s claim that linguistic relativity is “circular”). Recent work with bilingual speakers attempts to tease apart the effects of language from the effects of culture on aspects of bilingual cognition including perceptions of time, space, motion, colors, and emotion. Researchers have described differences between bilinguals and monolinguals in perception of color, representations of time, or other elements of cognition. Empirical research[edit] John Lucy has identified three main strands of research into linguistic relativity. The first is what he calls the “structure centered” approach. This approach starts with observing a structural peculiarity in a language and goes on to examine its possible ramifications for thought and behavior. The first example of this kind of research is Whorf’s observation of discrepancies between the grammar of time expressions in Hopi and English. More recent research in this vein is the research made by John Lucy describing how usage of the categories of grammatical number and of numeral classifiers in the Mayan language Yucatec result in Mayan speakers classifying objects according to material rather than to shape as preferred by speakers of English. The second strand of research is the “domain centered” approach, in which a semantic domain is chosen and compared across linguistic and cultural groups for correlations between linguistic encoding and behavior. The main strand of domain centered research has been the research on color terminology, although this domain according to Lucy and admitted by color terminology researchers such as Paul Kay, is not optimal for studying linguistic relativity, because color perception, unlike other semantic domains, is known to be hard wired into the neural system and as such subject to more universal restrictions than other semantic domains. Since the tradition of research on color terminology is by far the largest area of research into linguistic relativity it is described below in its own section. Another semantic domain which has proven fruitful for studies of linguistic relativity is the domain of space. Spatial categories vary greatly between languages and recent research has shown that speakers rely on the linguistic conceptualization of space in performing many quotidian tasks. Research carried out by Stephen C. Levinson and other cognitive scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics has reported three basic kinds of spatial categorization and while many languages use combinations of them some languages exhibit only one kind of spatial categorization and corresponding differences in behavior. For example the Australian language Guugu Yimithirr only uses absolute directions when describing spatial relations — the position of everything is described by using the cardinal directions. A speaker of Guugu yimithirr will define a person as being “north of the house”, while a speaker of English may say that he is “in front of the house” or “to the left of the house” depending on the speaker’s point of view. This difference makes Guugu yimithirr speakers better at performing some kinds of tasks, such as finding and describing locations in open terrain, whereas English speakers perform better in tasks regarding the positioning of objects relative to the speaker (for example telling someone to set a round table putting forks to the right of the plate and knives to the left would be extremely difficult in Guugu yimithirr). The third strand of research is the “behavior centered” approach which starts by observing different behavior between linguistic groups and then proceeds to search for possible causes for that behavior in the linguistic system. This kind of approach was used by Whorf when he attributed the occurrence of fires at a chemical plant to the workers’ use of the word ‘empty’ to describe the barrels containing only explosive vapors. One study in this line of research has been conducted by Bloom who noticed that speakers of Chinese had unexpected difficulties answering counter-factual questions posed to them in a questionnaire. After a study, he concluded that this was related to the way in which counter-factuality is marked grammatically in the Chinese language. However, other researchers have attributed this result to flawed translations that Bloom used. Another line of study by Frode Strømnes examined why Finnish factories had a higher occurrence of work related accidents than similar Swedish ones. He concluded that cognitive differences between the grammatical usage of Swedish prepositions and Finnish cases could have caused Swedish factories to pay more attention to the work process where Finnish factory organizers paid more attention to the individual worker. Another widely-publicized project with relevance to linguistic relativity is Daniel Everett’s work on the Pirahã language of the Brazilian Amazon. Everett observed several peculiarities in Pirahã culture that he interpreted as corresponding to linguistically rare features, such as a lack of numbers and color terms in the way those are normally defined, and a lack of certain types of clauses. Everett’s conclusions about the exceptional status of the Pirahã have been met with skepticism from other linguists, and some scholars reanalyzing his materials have argued that they don’t support his conclusions. That is, these critics argue, the lack of need for numbers and color discrimination explains both the lack of counting ability and the lack of color vocabulary. Recent research with non-linguistic experiments in languages with different grammatical properties (e.g., languages with and without numeral classifiers or with different gender grammar systems) showed that there are—to a certain degree—differences in human categorization due to such differences. But there is also experimental research suggesting, that this linguistic influence on thought is not of long continuance, but diminishes rapidly over time, when speakers of one language are immersed by another. Color terminology research[edit] Main article: Linguistic relativity and the color naming debate The tradition of using the semantic domain of color names as an object for investigation of linguistic relativity began with Lenneberg and Roberts’ 1953 study of Zuni color terms and color memory, and Brown and Lenneberg’s 1954 study of English color terms and color memory. The studies showed a correlation between the availability of color terms for specific colors and the ease with which those colors were remembered in both speakers of Zuni and English. Researchers concluded that this had to do with properties of the focal colors having higher codability than less focal colors, and not with linguistic relativity effects. Berlin and Kay’s 1969 study of color terms across languages concluded that there are universal typological principles of color naming that are determined by biological factors with little or no room for relativity related effects. This study sparked a long tradition of studies into the typological universals of color terminology. Some researchers such as John A Lucy, Barbara Saunders and Stephen C Levinson have argued that Berlin and Kay’s study does not in fact show that linguistic relativity in color naming is impossible, because of a number of basic unsupported assumptions in their study (such as whether all cultures in fact have a category of “color” that can be unproblematically defined and equated with the one found in Indo-European languages) and because of problems with their data stemming from those basic assumptions. Other researchers such as Robert E. Maclaury have continued investigation into the evolution of color names in specific languages, refining the possibilities of basic color term inventories. Like Berlin and Kay, Maclaury found no significant room for linguistic relativity in this domain, but rather concluded as did Berlin and Kay that the domain is governed mostly by physical-biological universals of human color perception. Outside of science[edit] The hypothesis of linguistic relativity has inspired many to think about how it might be possible to influence thought by consciously manipulating language. Therapy and self-development[edit] Main articles: General semantics and Neurolinguistic Programming Already as Sapir and Whorf were formulating the ideas of linguistic relativity, Polish-American engineer Alfred Korzybski was independently developing his theory of General Semantics which was aimed at using language’s influence on thinking to maximize human cognitive abilities. Korzybski’s thinking was influenced by logical philosophy such as Russel and Whitehead’s Principia Mathematica and Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.” Although Korzybski was not aware of Sapir and Whorf’s writings when he developed his thinking, the movement was followed by Whorf’s admirer Stuart Chase, who fused Whorf’s interest in cultural-linguistic variation with Korzybski’s programme in his popular work “The Tyranny of Words”. Another follower and popularizer of Korzybski’s work was S. I. Hayakawa, who wrote Language in Thought and Action. The General Semantics movement in turn influenced the development of Neurolinguistic programming, another therapeutic technique that seeks to use awareness of language use to influence cognitive patterns. Independently of Whorf and Sapir, Korzybski described the basic principle of his theory in a way that is a “strong” version of the hypothesis of linguistic relativity. We do not realize what tremendous power the structure of an habitual language has. It is not an exaggeration to say that it enslaves us through the mechanism of s[emantic] r[eactions] and that the structure which a language exhibits, and impresses upon us unconsciously, is automatically projected upon the world around us. —Korzybski (1930) in Science & Sanity p. 90 Artificial languages[edit] Main articles: Constructed languages and Experimental languages In their fiction, authors such as Ayn Rand and George Orwell have explored how linguistic relativity might be exploited for political purposes. In Rand’s work a fictive communist society have removed the possibility of individualism by removing the word “I” from the language of their community, and in Orwell’s 1984 the authoritarian state has created the language “Newspeak” to make it impossible for people to think critically about the government. Others have been fascinated by the possibilities of creating new languages that could enable new, and perhaps better, ways of thinking. Examples of such languages designed to explore the human mind include Loglan, explicitly designed by its inventor James Cooke Brown to test the hypothesis of linguistic relativity, by experimenting whether it would make its speakers think more logically. Speakers of Lojban, a development of Loglan, report that they feel speaking the language enhances their ability for logical thinking. Suzette Haden Elgin, who also was involved in the early development of neurolinguistic programming, invented the language Láadan, specifically devised to explore linguistic relativity, by making it easier to express what Elgin considered the female worldview, as opposed to Standard Average European languages which she considers to convey a “male centered” world view. Also the language Ithkuil developed by John Quijada, has been designed with linguistic relativity in mind, exploring the limits of how many cognitive categories a language can make use of, and keep its speakers aware of at a single time. Programming languages[edit] Kenneth E. Iverson, the originator of the APL programming language, believed that the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis applied to computer languages (without actually mentioning the hypothesis by name). His Turing award lecture, “Notation as a tool of thought”, was devoted to this theme, arguing that more powerful notations aided thinking about computer algorithms. The essays of Paul Graham explore similar themes, such as a conceptual hierarchy of computer languages, with more expressive and succinct languages at the top. Thus, the so-called blub paradox (after a hypothetical programming language of average complexity called Blub) says that anyone preferentially using some particular programming language will know that it is more powerful than some, but not that it is less powerful than others. The reason is that writing in some language means thinking in that language. Hence the paradox, because typically programmers are “satisfied with whatever language they happen to use, because it dictates the way they think about programs”. In a 2003 presentation at an open source convention, Yukihiro Matsumoto, creator of the programming language Ruby, said that one of his inspirations for developing the language was the science fiction novel Babel-17, based on the Sapir–Whorf Hypothesis. See also[edit] Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution Eskimo words for snow Ethnolinguistics Hypocognition Language and thought Linguistic anthropology Linguistic determinism Psycholinguistics Relativism Notes[edit] ^ Hill & Mannheim (1992) ^ Kennison, Shelia (2013). Introduction to language development. Los Angeles: Sage. ^ “The Sapir–Whorf hypothesis”, in Hoijer 1954:92–105 ^ This usage is now generally seen as a misnomer. As Jane Hill and Bruce Mannheim write: Yet, just as the Holy Roman Empire was neither holy, nor Roman, nor an Empire the “Sapir–Whorf Hypothesis” is neither consistent with the writings of Sapir and Whorf, nor a hypothesis (Hill & Mannheim 1992) ^ Koerner, E.F.K.”Towards a full pedigree of the Sapir–Whorf Hypothesis:from Locke to Lucy” Chapter in Pütz & Verspoor (2000:17)” ^ Wolf & Holmes (2011) ^ Lee, Penny (1996), “The Logic and Development of the Linguistic Relativity Principle”, The Whorf Theory Complex: A Critical Reconstruction, John Benjamins Publishing, p. 84, ISBN 978-1556196195 ^ Penny Lee. 1996. The Whorf Theory Complex: A Critical Reconstruction. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins. p16 ^ Ahearn, Laura, Living language : an introduction to linguistic anthropology (1. publ. ed.), Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, p. 69, ISBN 9781405124416 ^ Leavitt, John (2011), Linguistic Relativities: Language Diversity and Modern Thought, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-76782-8 ^ McComiskey, Bruce. Gorgias and the New Sophistic Rhetoric. Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press, 2001. ^ Gumperz & Levinson 1997:2 ^ Trabant, Jürgen.”How relativistic are Humboldts “Weltansichten”?” chapter in Pütz & Verspoor (2000) ^ Seuren 1998:180 ^ Seuren 1998:181 ^ Boas, Franz (1911), Handbook of American Indian languages (Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 40. Washington: Government Print Office (Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology).) 1 ^ Sapir, Edward (1929), “The status of linguistics as a science”, Language 5 (4): 207, doi:10.2307/409588 ^ Edward Sapir & Morris Swadesh (1946) American Indian Grammatical Categories. Word 2:103–112. Reedited for Dell Hymes in Language in Culture and Society, Harper and Row, 1964:100–107. ^ Sapir 1921: 213–4 ^ Sapir 1921: 215 ^ For a critique of Weisgerber, see, for example: Beat Lehmann (1998), ROT ist nicht ″rot″ ist nicht [rot]. Eine Bilanz und Neuinterpretation der linguistischen Relativitätstheorie. Gunter Narr, Tübingen. pp. 58-80; Iwar Werlen (2002), ‘Das Worten der Welt’, in: Lexikologie … Ein internationales Handbuch, ed. by D. Alan Cruse et al., Walter de Gruyter, Berlin & New York, 1.380-391. ^ Vygotsky, L. (1934/1986). Thought and language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ^ Lucy & Wertsch 1987 ^ Pula 1992 ^ See Carroll, J. B. 1956. Language, Thought, and Reality; Selected Writings of Benjamin Lee Whorf. Published jointly by Technology Press of MIT, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., Chapman and Hall, Ltd., London, 7. ^ Regna Darnell. 1990. Edward Sapir : linguist, anthropologist, humanist. Berkeley: University of California Press. p380-81. ^ Lucy (1992b:25) ^ Whorf (Carroll; Ed.); 1956: pp. 212–214 ^ Pullum 1991 ^ Lenneberg 1953 ^ Whorf, B. L. “The relation of habitual thought and behavior to language” in Carroll (ed.) 1956 ^ Lee 1991, Lee 1996, Leavitt 2011:179-187, Lucy 1992b:286, Lucy 1996:43, Dinwoodie 2006 ^ Lakoff (1987) ^ Brown and Lenneberg, 1954:455,457 ^ Brown 1976:128 ^ D’Andrade, Roy G. The Development of Cognitive Anthropology 1995: 185 ^ Gumperz & Levinson 1997:3 & 6 ^ Berlin & Kay 1969 ^ Gumperz & Levinson 1997:6 ^ Lucy (1992a) ^ Malotki 1983 ^ Pinker (1994:60) ^ Casasanto (2008), Lucy (1992a), Lakoff (1987) ^ Fishman, 1978 ^ Fishman, 1982, p. 5 ^ Whorf, 1956, p. 244 (criticizing Ogden’s Basic English). ^ Seidner, Stanley S., Ethnicity, Language, and Power from a Psycholinguistic Perspective. Bruxelles: Centre de recherche sur le pluralinguisme, 1982. ^ Gentner, Dedre; Boroditsky, Lera (2001). “Individuation, relativity, and early word development”. In Melissa Bowerman and Stephen Levinson. Language Acquisition and Conceptual Development. Cambridge University Press. pp. 215–256. ISBN 978-0-521-59659-6. ^ Levinson, Stephen (2001). “Covariation between spatial language and cognition, and its implications for language learning”. In Melissa Bowerman and Stephen Levinson. Language Acquisition and Conceptual Development. Cambridge University Press. pp. 566–588. ISBN 978-0-521-59659-6. ^ Gilbert AL, Regier T, Kay P, Ivry RB, Whorf hypothesis is supported in the right visual field but not the left, Proc. Nat. Ac. Sci. 2006 January 10; 103(2): 489–494. PMAS doi: 10.1073/pnas.0509868103 ^ Hickmann, Maya (2006). “The relativity of motion in first language acquisition”. In Maya Hickmann and Stéphane Robert. Space in Languages: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 281–308. ISBN 978-90-272-9355-8. ^ Perlovsky, Leonid (2009). “Language and emotions: Emotional Sapir–Whorf hypothesis”. Neural Networks 22 (5-6): 518–526. doi:10.1016/j.neunet.2009.06.034. ISSN 0893-6080. ^ Mazuka, Reiko; Friedman, Ronald S. (2000). Journal of East Asian Linguistics 9 (4): 353–377. doi:10.1023/A:1008356620617. ISSN 0925-8558. ^ Pavlenko, A. (2003). “Eyewitness memory in late bilinguals: Evidence for discursive relativity”. International Journal of Bilingualism 7 (3): 257–281. doi:10.1177/13670069030070030301. ISSN 1367-0069. ^ E.g. Pavlenko 1999, Cook and Bassetti 2010, Athanasopoulos 2009, Phillips & Boroditsky 2003 inter alia ^ Andrews 1994 ^ Boroditsky, Ham & Ramscar 2002 ^ Lucy (1997) ^ Lucy (1992b) ^ Lucy (1997:301) ^ Levinson 1996 ^ Au, Terry K, “Counterfactuals: In Reply to Alfred Bloom”, Cognition, 17 (3), 1984: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/001002778490012X ^ Lucy (1997:304) ^ Everett, Daniel L. (2005), “Cultural constraints on grammar and cognition in Pirahã”, Current Anthropology 46 (4): 621–646, doi:10.1086/431525, retrieved 1 October 2012 ^ Frank, Michael C.; Everett, Daniel L.; Fedorenko, Evelina; Gibson, Edward (2008), “Number as a cognitive technology: Evidence from Pirahã language and cognition”, Cognition 108 (3): 819–24, doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2008.04.007, PMID 18547557, retrieved 14 May 2009 ^ Andrew Ira Nevins, David Pesetsky, Cilene Rodrigues. 2009. Piraha Exceptionality: a Reassessment. Language 85(2):355-404 [1] ^ E.g. J. Y. Kou & M. D. Sera (2007). Classifier effect on human categorization: the role of shape classifiers in Chinese Chinese. In: Journal of East Asian Linguistics, 18, 1-19. ^ Bross, Fabian & Pfaller, Philip (2012): The decreasing Whorf-effect: a study in the classifier systems of Mandarin and Thai. In: Journal of Unsolved Questions, 2(2), S. 19-24. ^ Berlin, Brent & Kay, Paul (1969). Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution. Berkeley: University of California Press. ^ Lucy, J. A. (1997). The linguistics of “color”. In C.L. Hardin & L. Maffi (Eds.), Color categories in thought and language (pp. 320–436). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ^ Saunders, Barbara (2000). Revisiting Basic Color Terms. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 6, 81–99 ^ Levinson, Stephen C. (2000). Yeli Dnye and the Theory of Basic Color Terms, Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 10:1 (pp. 3–55). ^ MacLaury, Robert E. (1992). From Brightness to Hue: An Explanatory Model of Color-Category Evolution. Current Anthropology, 33(2), pp. 137–186. ^ MacLaury, Robert E. (1997). Color and Cognition in Mesoamerica: Constructing Categories as Vantages. Austin: University of Texas Press. ^ Korzybski, Alfred (1974), Time-Binding: The General Theory. Two Papers 1924–1926, Lakeville, CT: Institute of General Semantics, pp. (5), 54 ^ Lisa Wake (2008), Neurolinguistic Psychotherapy, Routledge ^ Read, Allen Walker (1983). The Semiotic Aspect of Alfred Korzybski’s General Semantics. Semiotics :101-107. ^ Science and Sanity: An Introduction to Non-Aristotelian Systems and General Semantics (Lancaster, Pa.: International Non-Aristotelian Library Publishing Co., 1933) ^ Okrent, Arika (2009), In the Land of Invented Languages: Esperanto Rock Stars, Klingon Poets, Loglan Lovers, and the Mad Dreamers Who Tried to Build A Perfect Language, Spiegel & Grau, pp. 208–257, ISBN 0-385-52788-8 ^ Foer, Joshua (December 24, 2012). “UTOPIAN FOR BEGINNERS: An amateur linguist loses control of the language he invented”. New York Times. ^ Iverson K.E.,”Notation as a tool of thought”, Communications of the ACM, 23: 444–465 (August 1980). ^ Graham, Paul (2004), Hackers & painters: Big ideas from the computer age, O’Reilly, pp. 174–178 ^ “The Power and Philosophy of Ruby (or how to create Babel-17” http://www.rubyist.net/~matz/slides/oscon2003/mgp00001.html References[edit] Andrews, David (1994), “The Russian color categories sinij and goluboj: An experimental analysis of their interpretation in the standard and emigré languages”, Journal of Slavic Linguistics 2: 9–28 Athanasopoulos, Panos (2009), “Cognitive representation of colour in bilinguals: The case of Greek blues”, Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 12 (1): 83–95, doi:10.1017/S136672890800388X Berlin, Brent & Paul Kay (1969), Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution, Berkeley: University of California Press Boroditsky, Lera, Wendy Ham & Michael Ramscar (2002), “What is universal in event perception? Comparing English & Indonesian speakers”, in W. D. Gray & C. D. Schunn, Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Brown, R. & Eric Lenneberg (1954), “A study in language and cognition”, Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 49 (3): 454–462, doi:10.1037/h0057814 Brown, R. (1976), “In Memorial Tribute to Eric Lenneberg”, Cognition 4 (2): 125–153, doi:10.1016/0010-0277(76)90001-9 Casasanto, Daniel (2008), “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Whorf? Crosslinguistic Differences in Temporal Language and Thought”, Language Learning 58 (1): 79, doi:10.1111/j.1467-9922.2008.00462.x Cook, Vivian & Benedetta Bassetti (2010), Language and Bilingual Cognition, Hove: Psychology Press Dinwoodie, David W. (2006), “Time and the Individual in Native North America”, in Sergei Kan; Pauline Turner Strong; Raymond Fogelson, New Perspectives on Native North America: Cultures, Histories, And Representations, U of Nebraska Drivonikou, G. V., P. Kay,T. Regier, R. B. Ivry, A. L. Gilbert, A. Franklin & I. R. L. Davies (2007), “Further evidence that Whorfian effects are stronger in the right visual field than the left”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104 (3): 1097–1102, doi:10.1073/pnas.0610132104, PMC 1783370, PMID 17213312 Everett, Caleb (2013), Linguistic Relativity: Evidence Across Languages and Cognitive Domains, Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton Fishman, Joshua A. (1978), “Positive bilingualism: Some overlooked rationales and forefathers”, in J. E. Alatis (Ed.), International dimensions of bilingual education, Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, pp. 42–52. Fishman, Joshua A. (1982), “Whorfianism of the third kind: Ethnolinguistic diversity as a worldwide societal asset”, Language in Society 11: 1–14, doi:10.1017/S0047404500009015 Gilbert, Aubrey L., Terry Regier, Paul Kay & Richard B. Ivry (2008), “Support for lateralization of the Whorf effect beyond the realm of color discrimination”, Brain and Language 105 (2): 91–98, doi:10.1016/j.bandl.2007.06.001, PMID 17628656 Graham, Paul (April 2003), “Beating the Averages”, Essays, retrieved 2009-05-15 Gumperz, John; Levinson, Stephen, eds. (1996), Rethinking Linguistic Relativity, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Hill, Jane H & Bruce Mannheim (1992), “Language and World view”, Annual Review of Anthropology 21: 381–406, doi:10.1146/annurev.an.21.100192.002121 Hoijer, Harry, ed. (1954), Language in culture: Conference on the interrelations of language and other aspects of culture, Chicago: University of Chicago Press Lakoff, George (1987), Women, fire, and dangerous things, University Of Chicago Press Leavitt, John (2011), Linguistic Relativities: Language Diversity and Modern Thought, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-76782-8 Lee, Penny (1996), The Whorf Theory Complex — A Critical Reconstruction, John Benjamins Lenneberg, Eric; A. M. Brown (1956), “The Language of Experience: a Study in GostarGostar
      • Rafael Ortega's avatar
        Rafael Ortega permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 13:58

        Mario Braga hiperligação permanente
        28 Novembro, 2013 02:32

        Descobriste a wikipedia e agora não queres outra coisa.

        TL;DR

        Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 16:47

        não tem a ver como o discurso é manietado pela mente do orador

        o discurso é eivado de preconceitos e pré-conceitos,,,,

        obviamente a maioria pensa que pensa livremente mas está condicionada por condições e barreiras pré-existentes

        a barreira linguística é uma dessas

        Gostar

    • António's avatar
      27 Novembro, 2013 17:05

      O Alexandre, imerecida, porque??????????????????

      Gostar

      • Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira's avatar
        Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 17:12

        Porque não fizeram os respectivos descontos, porque é imoral alguém reformar-se com o último vencimento, ou até mais do que isso. Além disso, a entidade patronal não enviou para a CGA os 23,75% que lhe compete como fazem os privados. Entre outre outras coisas!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

        Gostar

      • Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira's avatar
        Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 19:43

        É claro que quando falo em imerecida, não me refiro ao desempenho profissional dos funcionários públicos, mas apenas às suas carreiras contributivas.

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      • André's avatar
        André permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 19:55

        Mas é imerecida por causa deles, ou por causa daquilo que os governos de Cavaco Silva, António Guterres, Durão Barroso (e o emplastro) e José Sócrates decidiram ao longo das décadas? A culpa é dos funcionários que nunca tiveram poder de decisão, ou dos governos (entre eles governos do PSD) que sempre tomaram as decisões?

        Gostar

      • Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira's avatar
        Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 20:07

        Então os sindicatos da função pública não são incluidos na lista? É evidente que a culpa foi dos vários governos, mas os representantes dos trabalhadores também têm responsabilidades.
        Mas a questão agora nem é essa. A questão é que o sistema da CGA não é minimamente sustentável.

        Gostar

      • André's avatar
        André permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 07:13

        Nesse ponto concordo consigo. E o da segurança social é? Eu simplesmente peço uma solução diferente da sua, mas concordo que, tal como está, o sistema é insustentável a médio e longo prazo.

        Gostar

    • António's avatar
      27 Novembro, 2013 22:13

      desculpe lá Alexandre, mas foi essa senhora que fez as leis???

      ela fez a parte dela assim como todos os outros reformados,,,,

      as regras do jogo só servem quando nos dá jeito….

      se estava mal, e pelos vistos está, já deveria ter sido mudado, e há muito tempo,,,

      o que ela faz, e não tenho nenhuma procuração, é tão só defender aquilo que lhe garantiram seja 1€ ou um milhão….

      tudo o resto são loas……………………………..

      o JM trabalha bem,,, agit prop,,, dá um jeito do camano….

      Gostar

      • Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira's avatar
        Alexandre Carvalho da Silveira permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 00:15

        Tá bem, António, mas a mim não me apetece pagar mais impostos para suportar pensões que não são sustentáveis.

        Gostar

      • Churchill's avatar
        Churchill permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 10:42

        Se é por apetites, à sra. também não lhe apetece perder o rendimento que lhe tinham atribuido, apenas para o Alexandre não pagar mais impostos.

        É claro que a questão dos impostos do Alexandre só se coloca porque alguém resolveu usar o dinheiro da CGA para pagar pensões aos beneficiários dos fundos privados que o Estado usou para pagar dividas (muitas delas feitas para subsidiar construtoras prvadas de autoestradas desertas), juntando a isso a ideia peregrina de a partir de 2005 os novos funcionários não descontarem para a CGA. O sistema nunca pode ser sustentavel se continuarmos como até aqui a reduzir os contribuintes e a aumentar os beneficiários.

        De quem é a culpa? não será do Alexandre, mas dúvido que seja da sra.!

        Gostar

  2. piscoiso's avatar
    piscoiso permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 14:11

    O João Miranda, por assim dizer, tirou-me as palavras do nariz, pois assim que li o post espirrei.

    Gostar

    • colono's avatar
      colono permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 16:27

      Espirrou e não tirou essa m**** da boca? Porco!

      Gostar

    • colono's avatar
      colono permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 18:10

      Quando é sais da Etar… nunca miais és reciclado?

      Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 18:19

        BOM UM TIPO QUE ADMITE PUBLICAMENTE SER UM CRIMINOSO

        COM POSSE DE ARMAS ILEGAIS SEJA NA MÃO DE REPUBLICANOS OU THALASSAS..

        E INDA SE VANGLORIA DE SER ESCUMALHA ASSOCIAL

        NÃ ADEVIA DIZER AO RESTO DO LIXO POLÍTICO … nunca miais és reciclado?

        principalmente o miais que é de mais

        Gostar

  3. Jorge Araujo's avatar
    Jorge Araujo permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 14:22

    Así como el mandamiento de «no matar» pone un límite claro para asegurar el valor de la vida humana, hoy tenemos que decir «no a una economía de la exclusión y la inequidad». Esa economía mata. (…) En este contexto, algunos todavía defienden las teorías del «derrame», que suponen que todo crecimiento económico, favorecido por la libertad de mercado, logra provocar por sí mismo mayor equidad e inclusión social en el mundo. Esta opinión, que jamás ha sido confirmada por los hechos, expresa una confianza burda e ingenua en la bondad de quienes detentan el poder económico y en los mecanismos sacralizados del sistema económico imperante.

    Papa Francisco, Evangelii Gaudium

    Gostar

    • und's avatar
      und permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 18:21

      non bossemecê deve tar equivocada isse num é latim nem italiano

      nem parece ser argentino……parece mais castellano….ó llano estacado

      Gostar

  4. josé's avatar
    josé permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 14:39

    Como reformado da Segurança Social, declaro que não me sinto representado, pela anafada Presidente da APRE – Apre retro Satanás – que, mais não quer, do que manter os privilégios INÍQUOS – mas Constitucionais, na douta ponderação do PR e TC – de quem se reforma pela CGA.

    Gostar

    • und's avatar
      und permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 18:27

      bom i ni cu ós é exagero né

      se bem que se reformem mais cedo e melhore que os restantes…..deram o voto ao manifesto pra continuar assis….

      é como o racket das caixas de previdência que antecedem o estado novo

      nenhum governo quis mexer nisso…..apesar de não servir os interesses dos que descontaram durante décadas para as caixas de previdência

      e podia-se dizer o mesmo da salazarista FNAT transformada em fundação do INATEL

      servem interesses vários…

      isse sim são privilégios i ni cu ós….

      Gostar

  5. fado alexandrino's avatar
    27 Novembro, 2013 15:04

    Pois eu como reformado da CGA também não lhe autorizo representação nenhuma, ela que represente o PS em cerimonias oficiais e já vai contente.

    Nota:
    Agradeço muto a honra de os meus comentários “estarem sujeitos a aprovação” mas gostava de saber a que devo tal honraria.
    Obrigado.

    Gostar

  6. tamal's avatar
    tamal permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 15:25

    … se querem, aumentem os impostos a toda a gente, mas principalmente a quantos ainda pensem ter mais filhos, que o mesmo é dizer, mais canseiras, mais gastos …

    Gostar

  7. zeca marreca de braga's avatar
    zeca marreca de braga permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 15:25

    O Catroga e o Dias Loureiro não têm netos?

    Gostar

  8. tamal's avatar
    tamal permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 15:38

    … e principalmente a quem ainda pensa filhos ter, o mesmo é dizer, mais canseiras, mais gastos, e para quê?, para os dar à emigração, na sábia sabença de um servil da dona merka, coelho, que à custa dos pais de País e assim da Escola que lhe prepara de graça essa malta da emigração, assim pronta a produzir sem detença, logo, sem detença, um superavit na economia alamana, enquanto a nossa definha, sugada pelas PPP e compadres do nosso governo da troika, ao último grito da máfia de nos ir ao bolso .

    http://fazlike.com/trabalham-ao-preco-da-china-mas-121-mil-prefere-emigrar/

    Gostar

    • Mario Braga's avatar
      28 Novembro, 2013 01:34

      a nossa é reinvestida em angola como nos tempos da cahora bassa

      vai da mota e engil prás PPP’s e volta

      ou vai Brisa e nã volta ….mas deves ter andado a 150 à hora nas autobahn’s do terceiro encaixe…..

      en cai xás t’ e?

      Gostar

      • Mario Braga's avatar
        28 Novembro, 2013 01:36

        antes que escrevas que cahora bassa num é em angola e ponhas link

        agente já sabe…..a renamo tamém….

        Gostar

  9. YHWH's avatar
    YHWH permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 15:49

    O JM deve saber que a referência de impostos a «toda a gente» subentende aquele nicho de gente bem que até tem tido direito a isenções e perdões (BPN…) extraordinárias por parte deste governo tão forte com os fracos e tão fraco com os fortes… (Marques Mendes dixit…)

    Gostar

  10. JA's avatar
    27 Novembro, 2013 16:14

    “Porque diz isso?

    Estar a destruir a classe média traz um risco grande para o país. Repare que na Função Pública quem vai ser atingido são professores, médicos, enfermeiros, militares. Eram estas pessoas que sustentavam de certo modo a economia. Porque podiam consumir para além da sobrevivência. Consumíamos livros, CD’s, cinema, viagens – tínhamos essa possibilidade. Neste momento isso está tudo posto de parte.”

    Haja paciência para isto. Criem-se é impostos sobre a estupidez…

    Gostar

  11. colono's avatar
    colono permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 16:30

    SE saísse a Salazar estávamos safos!

    Infelizmente saiu aos “mendes”!

    Gostar

    • und's avatar
      und permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 18:33

      um resposta digna dum cólon associal….e criminoso assumido…..

      faz mal pá o país tá cheio de gente como tu

      tamém tens 50 mil no cofre como o construtor civil do Pinhal Novo?

      toma cuidado com os moldavos…

      Gostar

  12. maria ferreira's avatar
    maria ferreira permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 16:40

    Na mesa de Mário Soares estavam vários pensionistas de luxo, mais de 8000€. Que bom falar assim em nome dos pobres.Mas se olhá-se-mos para o anfiteatro, um bom espelho dos que vivem à custa dos pobres.Gente que não dá emprego e que nada criou! Falam, falam, mas não dizem nada e não dão nada!

    Gostar

    • und's avatar
      und permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 18:46

      sua reaccionária sua façoista….soares deu-nos muita cousa

      bom a mim só me rendeu uns autocolantes e 8 contos mas deu muita coisa a outros…..

      nã tem tudo quem quer…

      Gostar

    • Fincapé's avatar
      Fincapé permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 21:09

      A Maria exagera. Não só nos valores dos pensionistas, a não ser que sejam da Segurança Social, mas também nos tracinhos do “olhá-se-mos” que, imagine-se, não leva tracinho nenhum, embora leve mais um “s”. 😉

      Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 16:55

        na mesa e fora dela havia muitos que acumulavam 2 e 4 pensões

        e até 18 com casas na lapa que devem valer uns tostões valentes

        se bem que o IMI seja baixinho em Lisboa

        um tinha uma casa em sintra ao lado da do melo antunes na rua actriz…….

        havia uns também com casario em caneças e na 24 de julho…

        um em benfica com 6 divisões e creadage….

        enfim classe média baixa ….tudo junto não haveria 500 milhões naquela maralha toda

        descontando soares e alegre claro…

        nem sequer valiam um oitavo do amorim…..

        Gostar

    • 1º. de Dezembro's avatar
      1º. de Dezembro permalink
      29 Novembro, 2013 13:24

      olhássemos?

      Gostar

  13. tric0001's avatar
    tric0001 permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 18:12

    “Portugal vai chegar ao fim do programa de ajustamento com sucesso e sem necessitar de recorrer a um segundo resgate porque a nossa economia já é mais sustentável e eficiente. O que Portugal realmente precisa é de uma plena união bancária na Europa, que corrija a transmissão da política monetária na área do Euro e que alivie o peso da dívida.”-Carlos Moedas
    .
    União Bancária!!!??? o que Portugal necessita é da União Bancária!!??? mais transferência de poder de Portugal para os Judeus-Protestantes-Jacobinos da Europa!!!?? lol palhaços !!!

    Gostar

    • tric0001's avatar
      tric0001 permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 18:36

      A Independência de Portugal custou muito sangue a gerações e gerações, para que uma geração de loucos jacobinos-judaicos-maçónicos da III-Republica a destrua…
      .

      Gostar

      • tric0001's avatar
        tric0001 permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 18:42

        Uma Europa que persegue os defensores dos Estados Nação…é uma Europa para ser destruída…a União Europeia e a URSS, são muito semelhantes ideologicamente no que toca ao objectivo da destruição dos Estados Nação…

        Gostar

      • André's avatar
        André permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 20:06

        Esse Portugal que fala e que custou sempre muito sangue é o mesmo país que desde a chancelaria de D. Sancho II (acho eu, não tenho a certeza, mas era um dos primeiros reis) confiava as contas públicas a judeus? Se for ver a documentação régia até à entrada da inquisição pode verificar que os nomes eram sempre nomes de judeus (geralmente difíceis de ler, uma vez que os escribas não sabiam muito bem como escrever os nomes judeus).
        É curioso que quando chega a inquisição e os judeus fogem do país nós perdemos grande parte do poder económico, mas divirta-se lá a dizer mal dos judeus, parece os autores deste blog e a Constituição.

        Gostar

      • Mario Braga's avatar
        27 Novembro, 2013 21:20

        a constituição é anti-semita?…..morte aos juízes nazis…..

        Gostar

      • tric0001's avatar
        tric0001 permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 00:33

        “Se for ver a documentação régia até à entrada da inquisição pode verificar que os nomes eram sempre nomes de judeus (geralmente difíceis de ler, uma vez que os escribas não sabiam muito bem como escrever os nomes judeus).”
        .
        Portugal não deve nada aos Judeus ponto final paragrafo. o contrário é que é verdadeiro…os Judeus são peritos em roubar aos portugueses! os escribas não sabiam escrever os nomes!!!???…não inventem!!!

        Gostar

      • André's avatar
        André permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 07:17

        Sim tric, na altura não havia uma ortografia portuguesa, havia algumas tendências linguísticas (por exemplo, tanto se podia escrever as coisas com m ou com n, podia-se escrever “scripta” (na forma longa, geralmente estava abreviada) como, por exemplo, “scrpvt”, há imensas variantes. Isto tornava-se ainda mais radical porque os nomes judeus eram escritos a partir daquilo que os escribas ouviam, ou seja, dava sempre uma enorme salganhada.

        Gostar

      • André's avatar
        André permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 07:52

        A sério tric, isso é mesmo daqueles odiosinhos estúpidos. E olhe que quem o está a dizer é uma pessoa que já foi chamada de antissemita por dizer numa aula de História que a criação de Israel foi um erro, que atualmente não devia haver ali estado judeu nenhum, apenas os países de quem lá vivia.

        Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 16:57

        ai filha e nã pediste ó papá que abrisse um processo disciplinare a quem tófendeu

        Gostar

      • André's avatar
        André permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 19:25

        Não, a Ágata sempre foi burra. Ela era tão, mas tão inteligente que quando o professor lhe disse que não podia usar o telemóvel dentro da sala e as janelas estavam abertas, ela colocou o telemóvel do lado de fora e continuou a mandar mensagens.
        Mas sabe und, eu não sou o Cavaco Silva, se me ofendem eu não abro processos disciplinares contra as pessoas, limito-me a passar ao lado (é mais cómodo e dá menos trabalho).

        Gostar

    • pvnam's avatar
      27 Novembro, 2013 23:31

      A elite da finança e das corporações está apostada em destruir a Nações.
      -» Um erro numa folha de cálculo – num estudo que defende a implementação de medidas de austeridade – foi considerado pela comunicação social (nota: é controlada pela superclasse: alta finança – capital global) como um erro gravíssimo de consequências bíblicas… ora, mas e depois… uma errata publicada posteriormente, que corrigiu alguns valores… mas que, todavia, no entanto, MANTEVE A CONCLUSÃO FINAL INTACTA… foi… ignorada pela pela comunicação social?!?!?!
      -» Andam por aí muitas marionetas cujo trabalhinho é ‘cozinhar’ as condições que são do interesse da superclasse (alta finança – capital global): emissão de dívida e mais dívida, implosão de Identidade Autóctone, etc…
      Nota:
      -> Um caos organizado por alguns – a superclasse pretende ‘cozinhar’ as condições que são do seu interesse:
      – privatização de bens estratégicos: combustíveis… electricidade… água…
      – caos financeiro…
      – implosão de identidades autóctones…
      – forças militares e militarizadas mercenárias…
      resumindo: uma Nova Ordem a seguir ao caos… um Neofeudalismo!
      .
      .
      .
      P.S.
      Andam por aí marionetas ao serviço da superclasse (alta finança – capital global) com uma conversa… já há muito tempo esperada: «implosão das soberanias ou o caos».

      Gostar

  14. Carlos Dias's avatar
    Carlos Dias permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 18:25

    Gosto é dos reformados do período esperto.
    Eu explico, quando se falou na reforma das aposentações, e já anteriormente,de um ano para o outro foram aumentados em 80 para mais por cento.
    No ano seguinte reformaram-se com reforma por inteiro.
    E agora choram, com razão, porque não há direito.
    É pena que o governo não explique isto.
    Mas também é verdade que somos um país pobre e a mama só dá para aqueles que todos conhecem (e mais alguns)

    Gostar

    • und's avatar
      und permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 18:30

      há também reformados com 60% ,,,,

      o facto de estarem quase todos no topo da carreira deveu-se a décadas de progressões automáticas

      a culpa não é deles

      exceptua-se o caso dos militares que nesse caso a dignidade militar é incompatível com o congelamento das promoções

      este ano lá vão mais 5000 promoções…..

      Gostar

  15. und's avatar
    und permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 18:40

    e o dinheiro só é impedimento dos casais terem filhos nas classes ….mais viajadas

    aqui a maioria dos putos de 14 aos 18 já tem um puto ou dois abortos no cu rico culo…..

    basta ver quem enche as consultas de planeamento familiar pessoal jovem com o secundário ou o básico incompleto um ou dois putos vivendo de biscates

    e com um rendimento inferior à média dos portugueses que gastam 10 mil por ano
    segundo um estudo qualquer…..

    Gostar

  16. und's avatar
    und permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 18:43

    até temos exemplares com três putos e inda nem têm 25 anos…..

    teríamos mais mas alguns vão quinando…….um bateu com a moleirinha quando a bófia ia atrás dele

    num sei porquê mas o correio da manhã tv só dá reportage aqui do deserto

    ide pró porto carago estais a estragar u negócio à maltosa

    Gostar

  17. Fincapé's avatar
    Fincapé permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 19:13

    “O país dos reformados ricos mas sem netos”
    Caro João Miranda, as dezenas de milhares de jovens que abandonaram o país, mais as dezenas de milhares de jovens que não têm emprego nem perspetiva nenhuma, não são netos? Então, são o quê?

    Gostar

    • JoaoMiranda's avatar
      JoaoMiranda permalink*
      27 Novembro, 2013 19:26

      A pergunta a fazer é: porque tiveram de abandonar o país?

      Gostar

      • ora's avatar
        ora permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 19:39

        bom os de 1992 a 1998 abandonaram o país porque o trabalho era precário

        alguns foram para a suiça e Luxemburgo ganhar uns cobres e voltaram no século xxi

        outros casaram com italianos…e pressuponho com italianas e vivem la dolce vita no sud d’itália ou seja tá tudo desempregado

        já os que saíram de 2008 a 2013 saíram porque o trabalho é precário e cada vez mais mal pago

        agente que saíu do país em todas as décadas ispilica

        em 74 fomos prá apanha de fruta em españa ….arriba españa

        em 75 fomos levar café ós nossos primos e trazer melão na bagageira

        em 76 acho que foi pru causa dos xicolates

        ódespois em 81 foi porque a fiação faliu …..e obviamente o trabalho escasseava

        em 1981 tamém havia pessoal a fazer o mesmo que a sara norte fazia em marruecos

        ora em 82 ….o pessoal do lousal e d’Aljustrel foi indo para a construção civil na bélgica e no Luxemburgo porque cá a inflação ia comendo os magros salários de escavadores de pyrite

        em 1983 foram as inundações que levaram as searas a muita gente que as havia prantado e foram-se pra france e prós outros destinos

        adeixa cá ver queres os outros anos todos ou já chega?

        Gostar

      • Fincapé's avatar
        Fincapé permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 19:50

        O João Miranda sabe a resposta. Mas a questão é esta: por um lado, há uma baixa da natalidade em Portugal, como há em todos os países mais desenvolvidos e por razões que conhecemos – esta não parece de fácil alteração; por outro, a falta de emprego e a consequente saída de muitos jovens. Esta última é aquela onde se pode e deve agir. No entanto, todos eles são “netos” excluídos da economia.

        Gostar

      • André's avatar
        André permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 19:50

        Principalmente porque não têm trabalho BEM PAGO cá. É claro que para isso também contribui a diminuição dos salários, o não aumento do salário mínimo nacional, o aumento da idade da reforma (que faz com que os mais velhos continuem a ocupar postos de trabalho), o fraco consumo interno que faz com que muitos postos de trabalho no setor terciário (o setor mais representativo numa economia dum país desenvolvido) deixem de existir. Enfim, muitos jovens precisam de sair precisamente porque este governo não quer resolver os problemas, e quando os tenta resolver só faz pior. Tem a certeza que ainda quer perguntar porque tiveram de abandonar o país? É que parece-me que os principais culpados são aqueles que estão no governo e aqueles que os apoiam, entre outras pessoas, o João Miranda.

        Gostar

      • ora's avatar
        ora permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 19:52

        se bem me lembro em 1984 ganhava-se melhor a arrastar os pés na galiza do que a moer minério em campo de jales perto de oliveira dos azeméis

        em 85 o PRD nã dava trabalho a toda a gente que num tinha entrado nos outros 4 e por isse ir fazer uns mesinhos de verão à france ou à suisse dava pró ano inteiro e escapava-se à canícula

        em 1986 ……a construção civil voltou a arribar um niquinho e a partir daí foi sempre a abrir até o pessoal da brita ter fechado a ponte ao cavaco….

        até os manos da brita passaram pró transporte de hash que paga menos impostos e gasta menos gasoil…..

        enfim novo down e novo up em 1997…..2008…..depois a tecnovia deixou de dar trabalho ó jão rodrigues com cartão de técnico da tec movia movia novia e a muitos outros que devem andar agora em áfrica com a mota e engil

        resumindo: a mota e engil foi pra áfrica foder os escurinhos como fez connosco…..
        e pagar avenças à cleptocracia termo que o soares junior jura ter inventado
        pelo menos foi u cu gajo disse

        enfim emigrámos porque o nosso destino é o mar
        e nem temos uma marinha mercante de jeito vá-se lá saver puquê….

        ê cá é porque nun gosto de varejar aceitunas ….dá cabo das mãos

        mas daqui a 30 anos voltam todos que tamém nã querem velhadas nos lux en burgos….

        de resto aqui os nossos franciús já voltaram pra passar l’hiver

        ou l’enfer tante fax

        Gostar

      • Fincapé's avatar
        Fincapé permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 20:14

        As perspetivas de há umas décadas para os países nórdicos eram terríveis por causa da baixa de natalidade. Da Suécia até se dizia que por volta de 2000 estaria extinta. Não só não se extinguiu como melhorou continuadamente as condições de vida, melhorando ao mesmo tempo os índices de natalidade. O problema é que os bons modelos não servem aos países com maus governantes. Esse foi sempre o maior drama português: “elites” piores do que o povo que gerem.

        Gostar

      • Mario Braga's avatar
        27 Novembro, 2013 20:37

        Perspectivas de quê?
        Foi no nosso período de maior emigração e menor natalidade que fomos grandes……até derrotámos os espanhóis
        e emigrávamos por via da pesta negra

        já quando despovoávamos o reyno ao cheiro da canela….

        é estúpido dizer que um paÍS ONDE NASCEM 70 MIL CREANÇAS POR ANO S’EXTINGUE Ó BLUEBEARD SYNDROME

        JÁ TIBEMOS 1 MILHÃO DE GAMAS E NO INÍCIO DO XXº TINHAMOS 6 MILHÃO

        OS VELHOS LÁ SE VÃO FINANDO SENDO VELHOS A TOSTÃO OU VELHOS COM A PESETA A 12 TOSTÕES E O MARCO A 1030 TOSTÕES COMO NO VERÃO DE 1995….

        Gostar

    • ora's avatar
      ora permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 19:28

      os que abandonaram o país geralmente eram gente com ambições….e pais com grana pra lhes comprar bilhete de saída

      aqui os ciganos juntam-se aos moldavos na apanha da azeitona e da laranja

      a 2 euros por cada 20 quilos de laranja ou 10 horas a apanhar d’azeitona……a 25 eurritos ao dia

      e são jovens entre os 10 e os 28…..jovens tardios os de 28 que já têm 2 e 3 filhos

      esses foram muito mais afectados por esta crise

      sem feiras que deêm rendimento….compitição feroz pelas outras áreas de actividade vulgo niches eculogiques….gamanço tráfico reciclagem e reciclagem do gamanço…..

      tínhamos uma cigana de 24 e um filho qu’era caixa de supermercado pois tinha o 11º feito

      mas o supermercado faliu vai pra uns dois anos….

      nã num era o Alisuper…..

      tínhamos um cigano qu’era carregador na alicoop mas essa faliu vai pra mais de 5

      e quando cigano emigra vai fazer o mesmo que faz por cá…..

      e alimpar gasoil pra chegar a sevilla fica bué da caro e a andaluzia tá peor cu deserto

      Gostar

  18. ora's avatar
    ora permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 19:17

    non os reformados….r’icos com 600 a 2200 ou 2500 ao mês têm netos

    os do alfeite e da cp reformados entre os 800 e os 2300 brutos ao mês têm mais filhos que netos e a maioria nem sequer vive cá no torrão pátrio

    ……estacionamente de paroles….parole num parolos…têm netos como os netos dos napolitanos que dá 60 mil putos ao trabalho infanto juvenil e às casas pias da cruz…

    a maioria no gamanço e no lixo….

    a grande Almada tem umas escassas centenas filhas de pais qu’inda não emigraram ou que os deixaram para trás….

    e se em nápoles 60% dos alunos faltam às aulas nalguns arrebaldes da grande citá com regularidade

    em almada são raras as turmas que acumulem 4000 faltas por ano….

    ou as miúdas de 12 anos no gamanço ou na prostituição

    mas isso deve-se a décadas de importações para desempenharem essas funções sociais associais…..

    e a esses putos e pitas da trafaria, do alfeite, da costa da caparica, de santo antónio da charneca com a pior escola a nível nacional nos rank’s e do vale da amoreira à bela vista passando pela ruralidade do poceirão…..o orçamento e os seus cortes não os afectam

    já desde que nasceram que vivem na merda
    e alguns nasceram em 92…..

    já os que nasceram em 2001 o orçamento agrava-lhes a miséria em quase 300 euros por ano……

    são um porradão de ovos farinha e latas de salsichas e outras chichas que têm de pedir emprestado….

    estacionamento nº2 grátis sábados e domingos depois das 13 horas…
    e a quantos subsídios de miséria corresponde a dotação da fundação do inatel ou a outra ali prós lados de são bento

    aqui os subsídios culturais da câmara superam os dos 12 mil que perderam o RSI…..

    É SÓ FAZER as contas….

    já os salários do pessoal nas empresas municipais que dão pão a 80 directores sub-directores pró directores e chefes vários
    correspondem a apenas 1076…..RSI….POR ANO….

    aqui nu deserte tá tudo bem equilibrade

    Gostar

  19. André's avatar
    André permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 19:45

    Antes de mais, sou contra a existência de reformas com valores superiores a 3500€ mensais. Agora João, quais reformados ricos? Há uma pequena minoria de reformados que ganham uma reforma elevada, há uma minoria de reformados que ganha uma reforma aceitável, e há uma grande maioria de reformados a ganhar 300, 400 ou 500€. São esses os ricos? O João Miranda tem um conceito estranho de riqueza…

    Gostar

    • ora's avatar
      ora permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 20:00

      porquê? um tipo foi presidente da república ou ministro da educação dos chineses como o roberte carneiro ou engenheire da rodoviária nacional ….ou prensador de yellow cake na Urgeiriça

      um tipo que passou a vida na Urgeiriça e deu a ganhar milhões ao país e vai quinar mais cedo du cu Borges merece a reforma aos 55

      já um comandante da tap ache que nã

      um poliça aos 55…bom sei non podia fazer serviço de secretaria inté aos 60

      se bem que no exército se vá prá reforma aos 55 e se chame reserva territorial logo….

      já um médico radiologista reformar-se aos 58 com 3500 por mês é uma miséria

      até porque a maioria já num ganha nada com as clínicas privadas

      e 3500 brutos dá menos de 2800 limpos e é uma profissão muito muito cancerígena ó gama

      se bem que tenham adse..

      Gostar

    • ora's avatar
      ora permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 20:04

      e há uma grande maioria a ganhar abaixo de 274 aeurros….

      e nã sã só arreformados….

      já em nápoles miséria é ganhar abaixo dos 750 por famiglia

      bué de fazedor de pizza que foi pró desemprego desde 2010….tamém o custo da padaria in italy

      ide prá sardinha ou sardinia…..que lá hay muito travalho na construção si vil

      importamos um brasuca ou um moldavo pró teu lieu

      Gostar

  20. A. R's avatar
    A. R permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 20:41

    A esquerda anda de cabeça perdida: depois da reunião da gerontocracia ratista, dos apelos à violência, à violência das invasões, à troika da lagosta, as sessões de apitadelas nas estradas, etc está demonstrado Acabaram, esgotaram, entraram num vazio de ideias que é difícil de encontrar a menos que se entre num galinheiro.

    Gostar

    • Estou a ver...'s avatar
      Estou a ver... permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 20:48

      O “bonequinho” do lado é engraçado… os óculos (escuros), o pensinho… engraçado!

      Gostar

  21. A. R's avatar
    A. R permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 20:45

    Vou fundar uma associação: em breve publicarei o programa. Chamar-se-á:

    “Pelo direito a uma reforma no futuro” e irá avaliar se existe o dinheiro que os actuais contribuintes ainda descontam e, se não existir, cobrá-lo a quem o tirou.

    Gostar

    • Fincapé's avatar
      Fincapé permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 21:13

      O A.R anda cá um esquerdista! Agora quer fundar uma associação para preparar o futuro. Isso é coisa de socialistas. Os liberais só costumam pensar no minuto a minuto. 😉

      Gostar

  22. Zé's avatar
    permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 20:58

    Aumentem mas é o IMI e o IRS para não me cortarem mais na reforma. Os trabalhadores que paguem a crise!

    Gostar

    • Mario Braga's avatar
      27 Novembro, 2013 21:41

      aumentem o preço do gasoil e voltem a dar joaquin’s a gostinhos ó mundo…..

      AboutThe End of Oil
      Book
      The End of Oil: On the Edge of a Perilous New World is a non-fiction book by American journalist and author Paul Roberts. Published in 2004, it is Roberts’ book-length debut. It provides an analysis of the various problems associated with humanity’s reliance on oil and other fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas.
      Synopsis[edit]
      Though The End of Oil is not a chronological history of humanity’s use of fossil fuels, Roberts begins by recounting how Thomas Newcomen, in 1712, presented the first large steam engine, and thus helped spark the Industrial Revolution. He then goes on to explain the problems that have since developed, or may develop in the future, from humanity’s reliance on oil and its “geological siblings”, coal, and natural gas. While there is a chapter on hydrogen as a possible alternative to oil (not as an energy source, but as an energy carrier), the book is not focused on any one solution to the problems it lays out.
      According to Roberts, oil faces three major dilemmas. Most importantly, all fossil fuels are by their very nature limited in supply; as far as oil is concerned, the resulting dilemma is best known as the question of peak oil. Further, much of the oil consumed by affluent countries such as the United States is extracted in countries that are rather unstable politically, such as some of the members of the OPEC. The oil trade is therefore prone to become intertwined with international relations, although the nature of this interplay is highly controversial, with some citing oil as a reason for conflicts such as the Iraq War and others denying such claims. Finally, since the burning of fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide that was previously locked in the ground, humanity’s reliance on oil may contribute to global warming.
      As to the aims of the book, Roberts states at the end of the prologue:
      I am under no illusions that this book addresses all the important aspects of the evolving energy economy, or even most of them. Energy is a vast topic, with millions of components interwoven in a complex and everchanging pattern that defies quick answers or simple truths. ….

      Gostar

  23. @!@'s avatar
    @!@ permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 21:17

    Com dinheiro compram-se preservativos, pílulas, geles, uma parafernália de produtos para evitar ter descendentes. Acresce que parir dói e depois há as expectativas, o medo, a responsabilidade, sim, isso, a culpa, toda a psicologia moderna aterra sobre os filhos. assustador.
    Com ou sem resgate parece que vão ter que aumentar os impostos. Que a senhora é parva, deve ser pelo contágio criado pelas portas que os passos abrem.

    Gostar

    • Mario Braga's avatar
      27 Novembro, 2013 21:34

      bom filha o tempo de legar ao futuro carne para canhão

      está um pouco demodé…..só aquele bispo das forças armadas é que quer marchar contra os canhões….nunca percebi muito bem mas é uma marcha bué da gay…..

      uma jangada de pedra com menos carga humana singra melhor num futuro cheio de fome

      de resto a solução para a pressão populacional não vem de tufões ao estylo filipino….

      há 7000 milhões e continuam a aumentar e numa economia dependente do petróleo pra gerar comidinha isse é fatalis ó smilodon

      e ainda num chegámos a Greybeard
      After the “Accident,” all males on earth become sterile. Society ages and falls apart bit by bit. First toy companies go under. Then record companies. Then cities cease to function. Now earth’s population lives in spread-out, isolated villages, with its youngest members in their 50’s. When the people of Sparcot begin to make claims of gnomes and man-eating rodents lurking around their village, Greybeard and his wife set out for the coast with the hope of finding something better. With a New Introduction from the Author “When is science fiction not science fiction? The answer must be: When it becomes too frighteningly believable. This is.” – Sacramento Bee

      e inté deu filme muy malo como lo libro

      mas é uma populaça greybeard que enche a europa isso é

      vamos ter de fazer muito drone pra num ficarmos mai escurinhos cu camarada arménio num vai gostar duma cgtp só pra pretos em 2043

      Gostar

      • @!@'s avatar
        @!@ permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 06:43

        De Braga não é porque saberia que é cheia de moçoilos e moçoilas na doideira da idade e crianças é que se vão vendo apesar dos bispos do melo e do bom Jesus que, vá lá, ontem safou-se de boa mesmo fazendo asneira da grossa. Isso pró lados de Quintos é que é problemático. Nã trabalho, nã guito nã ocupação, não há bébé para ninguém.

        Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        29 Novembro, 2013 18:26

        é cheia? devem ter esvaziade d’algum lade

        Gostar

  24. tamal's avatar
    tamal permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 22:49

    E a final o JM induziu-nos em erro, a falta de dinheiro não é a principal razão para os casais portugueses não terem mais filhos, “Dinheiro é a principal razão para casais não terem mais filhos”… nada, a principal razão é porque não querem, simplesmente, ouvi-se claro hoje em todos os jornais noite, e então, digamos, os nossos casais não são parvos como os que faz o J M, pois sabe que quando o País precisar, quando não se limitar a parir criançada para a atirar para a emigração à força de passolas, boys e mais compadres ladrões, não há-de faltar maltosa a entrar por aí dentro.
    E então mentiu, montando todo um post sobre a premissa falsa.

    Gostar

    • und's avatar
      und permalink
      27 Novembro, 2013 23:06

      ouvi-se? jornais noite? e então o quê? e então digamos?

      e então bígamos….há mais

      os nossos casais? que suruba ehm ó slave master….

      e então mentiu?

      e então a verdade é tua?

      ó filha aqui fartam-se de fodere escavar a terra com um pau…..

      e de parir….mas nem todos o fazem

      a maioria é filho único e pai de filho único ou de filho zero

      e obviamente filho zero….num dá netos vá-se lá saber porquê?

      egotismo? é capaz

      Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        27 Novembro, 2013 23:16

        somos um país em que a procura interna excede o PIB há anos

        e o consumo público e privado excedem o investimento várias vezes…

        essa é a verdade in con veni vidi i ente…

        não nascem porque preferimos consumir

        somos uma sociedade pouco produtiva

        daí termos mais pedófilos da cruz que paes de filhos….

        e nestes 3 anos já mataram praí uns 100 putos às vezes foram junto com eles
        outras vezes deitaram fogo à casa e foram tomar café
        ou cortaram a filha e neta às postas pra nã sofrerem e foram tomar café

        não têm filhos porque preferem importar café

        e fodere os filhos dos outros….

        ou peor metê-los no ensino obrigaTÓRIO

        n~gostamos dos putos ó gama

        são estúpidos à brava puto…..

        ah é verdade num pecebes iste né….esquecia-me

        Gostar

      • tamal's avatar
        tamal permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 00:41

        ó coscuvilheiro, alembras-me os cães sempre atrás do rabo, sempre a cheirar outros e as cadelas …

        Gostar

      • Mario Braga's avatar
        28 Novembro, 2013 01:30

        bom tu é que vês rabos aqui e gajos a cheirarem-te o cu ó gama

        acho que queres é ser montado….

        a direcção avisa cagente num é desses

        mas obrigadinho por t’alembrares pá….

        Gostar

    • Pedro Oliveira's avatar
      Pedro Oliveira permalink
      28 Novembro, 2013 00:30

      Pois… Os casais não têm mais filhos por egoísmo. Bem sei como custa criar um filho, e sou dos ‘privilegiados’ que têm dois. Sabe melhor ir passar uma semana por ano na República Dominicana.

      Gostar

      • zeca marreca de braga's avatar
        zeca marreca de braga permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 00:48

        Por acaso sabe! Têm 2? Porreiro pá, mas o que é que nós temos a vêr com isso? Eu tb tenho 2 e despachei-os pro seminário, que é para não me atazanarem o juizo… faça o mesmo e já pode ir 14 diasitos ao Vietname…

        Gostar

      • Mario Braga's avatar
        28 Novembro, 2013 01:27

        olha este tem 33 é rico e num tem nenhum ….Macaulay Culkin, Macaulay Culkin PDA, Macaulay Culkin Dating, Macaulay Culkin Girlfriend, Macaulay Culkin Mila Kunis, Celebrity Pda, Macaulay Culkin Paris, Macaulay Culkin Photos, V Mystery Girl, Celebrity News
        Not since his breakup from Mila Kunis in 2011, after eight years of dating, did we see Macaulay Culkin get affectionate with a girl. But that is no longer the case.

        Culkin, 33, was

        já os poligâmicos soares tão cheios de grana mas nem por isso têm bué de filhos

        e aqui ciganos da mesma envergadura têm 5 e 6 cada um com uma mulhere só…..

        Gostar

      • tamal's avatar
        tamal permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 11:48

        Qual egoísmo? Mais do que é tê-los? Quem não tem filhos por egoísmo, por continuar a identidade, por chamar seu o que o não era ? E tudo o que fazes ou não, de livre vontade, é egoísmo, como a afirmação de ti .

        Gostar

    • tamal's avatar
      tamal permalink
      28 Novembro, 2013 12:02

      e ora essa então esse und e o ora é nem mais o mesmo Mário Braga em deambulação ?

      Gostar

  25. Maria Pereira's avatar
    Maria Pereira permalink
    27 Novembro, 2013 23:02

    Não tarda os neoliberais estão a defender o salário mínimo igualitário e as reformas mínimas garantidas, iguaizinhas, para todos os cidadãos, pois ninguém tem o direito de ter reformas de 3000 euros, ainda que tenha celebrado um contrato com o Estado, que decidiu unilateralmente tanto o valor do desconto como o valor da reforma, com base no salário auferido.
    Na mesma linha de pensamento ninguém deverá ter salários acima de 1000 euros, ainda que desempenhe funções de elevada complexidade, que exijam formação superior. Por isso há que descer salários, que ganhar acima da média é iníquo. Não tivessem os governantes corruptos assaltado os fundos de pensões, anos a fio e a situação seria outra.
    Ver esta gente a defender o que sempre condenou, ao serviço de credores sem escrúpulos, não deixa de ser irónico.
    Eu cá acho que devem adotar a máxima; “trabalho igual, salário igual, velhice igual, pensão igual”

    Gostar

  26. ora's avatar
    ora permalink
    28 Novembro, 2013 02:13

    dimecres 27 de novembre de 2013

    SOARES O MITO DE SÍSIFO OU O NARCISISMO EM SUPORTE DE VIDA MEDIÁTICO GERONTOCRÁTICO….OS PORTUGUESES SÃO UM PAÍS DE VELHOS PORQUÊ? PORQUE NÃO HÁ COLÉGIOS MODERNOS SUFICIENTES PRA ENFIAR LÁ OS CHATOS DOS PUTOS E OS PUTOS COM CHATOS SE BEM QUE O PAI DE SOARES TIVESSE METIDO O FILHO NO COLÉGIO MODERNO E SÓ TIVESSE TIDO UM….PROVAVELMENTE NÃO GOSTOU DA OBRA E TEVE MEDO DE REPETIR…É UMA EXPLICAÇÃO PARA A FALTA DE PUTOS NAS CLASSES SEM FUNDAÇÕES SEXUAIS SÓLIDAS MAS COM BOAS FUNDAÇÕES ECONÓMICAS SEMI-CÓMICAS…POR FALAR NISSO O BÍGAMO OTHELO TAMBÉM SÓ TEVE UMA FILHA PÔRRA OLHA SE ELE TEM GANHO AS ELEIÇÕES SÓ NASCIAM 35000 POR ANO….

    MIRROR IMAGE – MICHAEL G. CONEY – MARYLIN PLANET

    UM ORGANISMO QUE COPIA TODOS OS OUTROS PARA SURVIVRE POLITICAMENTE

    PROTOPLASMA INFORME QUE SE TRANSFORMA NAS AULAS MAGNAS

    EM CARDUMES DE PEIXES PIRANHA VOADORES

    ELEPHANT WORM’S

    UND GIANT LIZARDS QUE METEM O SOCIALISMO NA GAVETA

    PARECE HAVER UM PARALELISMO COM SOARES

    MAS OS AMORPHS TOMAM FORMA E CONSCIÊNCIA HUMANA

    Publicat per Para a Posteridade e mais Além EM MEMÓRIAS MUI MUY FUTURAS

    Etiquetes de comentaris: A POLIGAMIA TAMBÉM NÃO PARECE AUMENTAR MUITO O Nº DE CRIAS EM PORTUGAL

    Gostar

  27. André's avatar
    André permalink
    28 Novembro, 2013 07:27

    Parece que a estes os impostos elevados não impedem a criação de fortunas… Só o Américo Amorim duplicou a fortuna, mas não desesperem, o Soares dos Santos (apesar de ser holandês no momento de pagar impostos) também aumentou ligeiramente (já dava para cobrir uma série de despesas da segurança social) o seu capital. Viva o luxo dos ricos (ricos não, que o Américo Amorim já disse que não é rico, é só um trabalhador, ricos são os reformados a 500€)!
    http://economico.sapo.pt/noticias/americo-amorim-volta-a-ser-o-homem-mais-rico-de-portugal_182576.html

    Gostar

  28. tamal's avatar
    tamal permalink
    28 Novembro, 2013 11:51

    Já pela Etiópia e Mali a crise e os baixos salários, como a falta de emprego, não impede as mulheres de terem filhos e homens de lhos fazerem como é que Deus quer .

    Gostar

    • tamal's avatar
      tamal permalink
      28 Novembro, 2013 11:58

      Outras culturas, obviamente .

      Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 17:01

        e morrem menos do que em angola….800 em cada mil chegam aos 5 anos
        e metade deles chega até a ter filhos e morre depois dos 40….

        outras culturas ó b’via mente

        é por isso que os porcos comem as crias en excesso….

        Gostar

  29. piscoiso's avatar
    piscoiso permalink
    28 Novembro, 2013 17:00

    A baixa da natalidade tem muito a ver com o mercado dos preservativos.

    Gostar

    • und's avatar
      und permalink
      28 Novembro, 2013 17:04

      non tem a ver com maior rendimento disponível

      esterilidade masculina e secundariamente feminina

      obviamente com os contraceptivos orais inclusive os com efeitos abortivos

      com a falta de educação sexual

      e com as expectativas criadas pelo nível de vida de uma classe média muy mérdia

      Gostar

      • und's avatar
        und permalink
        28 Novembro, 2013 17:13

        e com a emigração dos nascidos entre 1970 e 1990 …..que têm saído regularmente do país desde os anos 90….e os últimos desde 2006….alguns com os pais e outros sozinhos…

        esses dificilmente têm os filhos cá

        a geração de 1960 até 1970….além do flagelo da droga e da precariedade laboral teve que competir com machos mais velhos
        daí o número notável de viúvas de 40 e picos a 53 ANOS AQUI NO DESERTO….

        casaram como a herédia aos 28 anos com um de 53 ou 63

        no caso do ex-vice reithor do algarve era mais 24 …e 70 anos….

        já deve estar a receber a pensão de sobrevivência

        o ex-reithor de évora o jorge araújo também deixou a legítima por um modelo mais novo

        houve muitos milhares de casos….

        uma percentagem significativa 2 a 3%…..uma vez teentaram fazer um estudo sobre isse mas cortaram os fundos….

        Gostar

Indigne-se aqui.