We just had to trust the experts again.
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I am not morally against the idea of UBI. I think it merits discussion.
But color me skeptical that UBI would free people up to be creative and innovate. Not a lot of examples from history where innovation wasn’t directly spurred by motive to profit. I would in fact be shocked if it didn’t cause an epidemic of laziness (obesity, drug and alcohol abuse, declining birth rates, etc.)
Sure bad things could happen. But the idea behind it is simple and relatively sound. No one can comfortably live off 12K a year. Even throwing in welfare, etc. you can't comfortably live at that level. But if you had 12K more per year, maybe you'd take a job somewhere else where you'd rather live than somewhere where you can earn more money.
I understand the aspect of everyone would just increase prices, there is a threat of that, but it's not a lock. Especially with smart usage of it's funding.
UBI only makes sense if you massively scale back other social program spending or you will definitely have massive inflation.
Which is why I don’t think it ever finds a home as a policy. Libertarians/conservatives aren’t interested in any social program that increases the deficit (only wars will get the preferred treatment). Progressives aren’t interested in UBI if it comes at the cost cuts to targeted social programs.There is an argument to be made that UBI is a "libertarian" substitute for paternalistic or "nanny state" versions of the social safety net.
Should we be selling our farmland to the CCP?
Isn't that free market?
I noticed that this was never addressed....
I don't think we should be restricting what people do with their own property... but I could be convinced that we shouldn't be doing certain business dealing with a hostile foreign actor
And this is all I'm saying. SOME restrictions always make sense.
Once we realize that corporations are not 'American' but they are actually global interests that sometime go against the American people then people will be more comfortable with the government exercising its one true purpose.
There is a considerable difference in what I'm suggesting - that private citizens can't sell domestic assets to foreign governments - and what you are saying - governments should decide winners and losers and what is too big vs not
Your solution to these problems seems to always be some form of central planning, comrade thetheI'm aware that you aren't agreeing with the latter. But once you acknowledge that there are certain situations where 'free-market' isn't best then its all about how many of those situations exist.
Your solution to these problems seems to always be some form of central planning, comrade thethe
No - My solution is to break up the central planning comrade Chop.
You just benefit from the current system so you have no incentive for it to change. I see past my own successes.
your solution is to replace current central planning with thethe-approved central planning
my solution is remove all central planning
You will never remove the central planning that is happening right now without intervention. Its only going to expand as organizations like the WEF and the large corporations merge and impose their agenda globally.
No - My solution is to break up the central planning comrade Chop.
You just benefit from the current system so you have no incentive for it to change. I see past my own successes.