Among Democrats, women are now up to about 40% in Congress. I could easily imagine that passing 50% in another decade or two as older members retire.
But <10% on the GOP side.
The short answer is: there is still a significant part of the electorate which prefers to have male representatives, and various networks and institutional structures in some parties which give men an advantage.
It was kind of joke, but why would congressman’s sex affect his decisions if he is professional? What are these important questions which are so affected by Y-chromosome?
More generally: why have more than one representative at all? Because every person has a slightly different perspective based on where they're from. The wider the variety of opinions (at least to the degree they reflect the diversity of opinions -- urban/agricultural/wilderness; male, female; different levels of education and background; etc) -- the more useful the result.
So renwable Energy increased from 7 percent to 10 percent in 12 years with a perfect linear slope.
So we just need only about 300 years till 100%.
Good luck with that.
Is anybody reading these plots? This is really the worst news I read this year.
Don't know why I'm down voted. Did I miss anything? I thought I'd read about some good news but then it just showed how bad it really is...
Let's hope we can speed up considerably.
Not only, but apparently includes bio-fuels. Sorry, but agriculture is hugely environmentally impactful. We should not be growing fuel. I think a lot of it is subsidized by governments. Extracting petroleum from the ground is going to continue to be cheap for a very long time.
Perhaps that is the argument, but corn or sugar cane or whatever don't magically become diesel. There's energy and other external costs put into the system, pollution by fertilizers, etc. Then again, growing trees on the same agricultural land would sequester how much carbon? And trees would be processed to building materials (among other uses) not released back into the atmosphere so quickly.
Or, look at it differently: we've increased our renewable energy capacity percentage by 42% over 12 years, even as world energy demand rose. (0.1/0.07 = 1.42)
This is great news! In about 75 years, we'll use >90% renewable energy. (1.42^(x/12) = 0.9/0.1)
Which of these is the better model? I don't know, I can't eyeball statistical regression on this chart. But my gut says percentage of energy use growth isn't what we should pay attention to if we want to predict the long run future. When/if renewables become far cheaper than coal, that percentage is going to skyrocket fast.
You missed an important point, the 2017 increase. "According to the International Energy Agency, the world got nearly 25% of its electricity from renewables in 2017, and that number should jump to 30% within the next few years."
That's a wrong way to look at things. I wouldn't have any problems with what you said if you rephrased it as "as long as very poor people exist..." Socialist/communist revolutions have repeatedly shown that merely eliminating "the rich" leads to some very tragic outcomes for the poor down the road, complete with starvation, GULAGs, and millions of people dead.
Can you please stop posting generic ideological comments to HN? Regardless of which ideology or how right you are, they lead only to tedious topics about which no one has anything new to say—plus flamewars, which is what we're most trying to avoid here.
> Don't be deceived when they tell you things are better now. Even if there's no poverty to be seen because the poverty's been hidden. Even if you ever got more wages and could afford to buy more of these new and useless goods which industries foist on you and even if it seems to you that you never had so much, that is only the slogan of those who still have much more than you. Don't be taken in when they paternally pat you on the shoulder and say that there's no inequality worth speaking of and no more reason to fight because if you believe them they will be completely in charge in their marble homes and granite banks from which they rob the people of the world under the pretence of bringing them culture. Watch out, for as soon as it pleases them they'll send you out to protect their gold in wars whose weapons, rapidly developed by servile scientists, will become more and more deadly until they can with a flick of the finger tear a million of you to pieces.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 87.5 ms ] threadBut <10% on the GOP side.
The short answer is: there is still a significant part of the electorate which prefers to have male representatives, and various networks and institutional structures in some parties which give men an advantage.
it is true if Congress would be engaged in sex related questions only
But if it were true it would suggest that there are some important questions going unaddressed the way things are right now.
Assuming you're naive, here's an example from today's paper: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/31/opinion/childbirth-injury...
More generally: why have more than one representative at all? Because every person has a slightly different perspective based on where they're from. The wider the variety of opinions (at least to the degree they reflect the diversity of opinions -- urban/agricultural/wilderness; male, female; different levels of education and background; etc) -- the more useful the result.
Is anybody reading these plots? This is really the worst news I read this year.
A significant amount of work and investment goes into making some of these plots trend that way:
https://datareport.goalkeepers.org/
You might be down-voted because you take that improvement for granted.
This is great news! In about 75 years, we'll use >90% renewable energy. (1.42^(x/12) = 0.9/0.1)
Which of these is the better model? I don't know, I can't eyeball statistical regression on this chart. But my gut says percentage of energy use growth isn't what we should pay attention to if we want to predict the long run future. When/if renewables become far cheaper than coal, that percentage is going to skyrocket fast.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
It's a nice article but as so often, a misleading title and suggestive charting choices. Hopefully fixing that will be in the 2019 article.
-- Jean-Paul Marat, 1743-1793