http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DIwZs...eature=related
Please(!) no VI. I know he looks like George W Bush - I don't care. Gimme some arguments for his type based on what he says.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DIwZs...eature=related
Please(!) no VI. I know he looks like George W Bush - I don't care. Gimme some arguments for his type based on what he says.
LSE was what I was thinking also. I'm surprised!
I was actually thinking ESTp...with Te demonstrating as a second option...it's hard to tell from the video because he could be reading a script and other than that he speaks nothing of his personal self.
All the functions use the past and the future. Ni just assesses the flow of events and makes predictions.
ESTP(?)
There are 2 principally different methods wich relate to VI: phisiognomy and nonverbal (also called "image method"). Some typers mix them. Both methods may use videos and photos. Image method have more resonable basis, while phisiognomy is marginal (in ex-USSR, at least).Quote:
Please, no VI.
bump
i agree about the ESTj typing.
Does anyone agree with his general assessment regarding the inevitable rise of the USA and the collapse of China? I know a certain Polish aristocrat who wouldn't.
oh, and he's probably enfp or esfp. estj is a serious contender for the worst possible typing for him.
While it sounds unthinkable now, he believes that, by the 2030's, the advanced countries are going to be competing with each other for immigrants and paying people to immigrate.
"The multicultural dream" is about to turn into "a security nightmare".
George Friedman - ENFP - Huxley
http://122g2g321ipu7384u15dtr81.wpen...e-Friedman.jpg
So, his book was written in 2009 and this is what he predicted for the 2010's:
- The US vs. Jihadi war will wind down. In spite of the recent surge of ISIS, this is, in fact, slowly happening. In the far future, it will be as forgotten as the Spanish-American war and all the hysteria it brought about will seem faintly ridiculous.
- Russia will ignite a mini-cold war with the West by moving into Central Asia, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe. Russia has moved into Central Asia, and there has definitely been a confrontation with Russia in the Ukraine and Syria, although Russia hasn't absorbed Ukraine as per his prediction. Friedman goes on to predict that Russia will collapse at some point in the 2020s, as Moscow's coffers dry up and its regional governments begin to look out for themselves.
- China will become unstable and insular. Friedman argues that China operates along dynastic cycles. Whenever China opens up to the world, the coastal regions become rich from trade while the interior remains poor. This creates resentment and separatism until another Mao-like figure takes over, closes the country to foreigners, imposes a brutal repression apparatus, and equalizes the wealth. China's current chairman has indeed successfully cracked down on previously-enjoyed freedoms, and China is in the process of introducing harsh, authoritarian systems. However, it hasn't closed itself off from the world and remains a major player.
- The European Union isn't a real nation-state and will eventually break apart as different nations pursue their own interests. Also, Western Europeans are too decadent and would never fight or die for a righteous cause, in any case. It's too early to tell whether or not this is true.
^ The last three must reach their culmination in the 2020's or early 2030's for the bulk of his predictions to hold up. Russia, China, and Europe have to go away to make room for the other superpowers that he predicts will take their place.