Meanwhile, the conservatives are apparently divided over how politely they should go about arguing with each other over how best to force the rest of us all into a theocracy as a reaction to their losses in the culture war.
But, you know, liberals are the dangerously extreme social engineers.
That article was... surprisingly unintelligible. Am I having a stroke?
@Gentlefish - maybe I need to define 'profit' better. Profit in its purest sense as I mean it is net gain for effort. It doesn't have anything to do with money. So when you spend spring tilling a field, plant seeds, then through spring and summer keep out the weeds and rodents and stuff, keep the field fertilized and watered, and in the fall you have a harvest where you now have more food than you consumed over the previous year - that's profit: you were able to produce more than one year's worth of food in one year's effort. So theoretically if you can store that food, you no longer need to work one year to eat for one year.
So it's very possible and reasonable for collectives or whatever to be "profitable" in this sense - they can internally keep improving their productivity and have a grand old time. This works in the collective because everyone in the collective has agreed to maximize the overall productivity, and so raise each individual's "profit", where the US is far down the road of "everyone tries to maximize their own personal profit" which - for a while, works, because most people are on equal footing and can push and pull to prevent others from making profit at the expense of others. But after a while, once enough ownership (or read, authority to decide what is done with resources) is concentrated, this push-and-pull breaks down and the powerful organizations can take profit at the expense of others.
So at the end of the day, we probably agree on the forest, but maybe not on the trees...