Wiploc
Veteran Member
I have one thing for those who would have me be thankful for the privilege to serve my 'betters'.
You got me curious about what it may be.![]()
Don't click on this:
:handGesture:
I have one thing for those who would have me be thankful for the privilege to serve my 'betters'.
You got me curious about what it may be.![]()
So people will stop wanting stuff like vacations because of UBI?And you should take that as seriously as the employers who bemoan the fact that they can't find people to program a basic web app, even though those people definitely exist in the United States. Those employers would just rather pay them the standard wage an Indian would make in Chennai rather than what the skill commands in Los Angeles. Or a Pole, or a Ukranian.At the low end employers bemoan the inability to find people who actually will show up reliably, sober and do what they're told--the stuff you don't consider job skills.
A lot of the people who bemoan this offer a 2.15 tipped minimum wage to work as a server. No shit they can't find workers.
In any case, even if I grant you this is true for the sake of argument, you haven't established why UBI would make this a bigger problem. Which was your central claim.
UBI would mean more people that didn't know how to actually keep a job. Fine so long as UBI continued, a big problem if something happened that meant it couldn't be continued.
And you should take that as seriously as the employers who bemoan the fact that they can't find people to program a basic web app, even though those people definitely exist in the United States. Those employers would just rather pay them the standard wage an Indian would make in Chennai rather than what the skill commands in Los Angeles. Or a Pole, or a Ukranian.At the low end employers bemoan the inability to find people who actually will show up reliably, sober and do what they're told--the stuff you don't consider job skills.
A lot of the people who bemoan this offer a 2.15 tipped minimum wage to work as a server. No shit they can't find workers.
In any case, even if I grant you this is true for the sake of argument, you haven't established why UBI would make this a bigger problem. Which was your central claim.
UBI would mean more people that didn't know how to actually keep a job. Fine so long as UBI continued, a big problem if something happened that meant it couldn't be continued.
People not worth hiring could be those with a poor work history at other companies. Maybe they have a history of being a bad team player, insubordination, dishonest, attendance issues, theft, criminal history, and etc.
Which is a personal failure, some being flawed, others perhaps being overcome by life problems. A case by case issue.
And when it happens, when criminal acts are committed against an employer by an employee, or when the employee doesn't do the work, then you FIRE them and call the cops if necessary, and you do it WITH CAUSE and EVIDENCE. Then, they can go to vocational rehab assuming they claim to want to work, or to school assuming they claim they want to learn, public housing or their parents' basement or wherever if all the rest fall through. There are few of the latter and not working with any of the former purely to spite the last category is a fool's errand; this is, I think, the best way to shape a jobs guarantee - with education and assistance, with infrastructural systems to facilitate it all.
I think Loren's argument boils down to desperate people make better workers.
Some people aren't really cut out for work. That's not a problem, unless your society fails to support those people.
And every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives.
Frankly I would much rather my taxes paid to give the unemployable the things they need to live, than that the unemployable stole them from me (particularly at the heavy markdown and high ancillary costs that stolen goods imply).
Some people aren't really cut out for work. That's not a problem, unless your society fails to support those people.
And every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives.
Frankly I would much rather my taxes paid to give the unemployable the things they need to live, than that the unemployable stole them from me (particularly at the heavy markdown and high ancillary costs that stolen goods imply).
But for most of them it's not an intrinsic failure, but how they were raised, and it can be overcome. That's a lot better than basically saying they are subhuman.
Some people aren't really cut out for work. That's not a problem, unless your society fails to support those people.
And every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives.
Frankly I would much rather my taxes paid to give the unemployable the things they need to live, than that the unemployable stole them from me (particularly at the heavy markdown and high ancillary costs that stolen goods imply).
But for most of them it's not an intrinsic failure, but how they were raised, and it can be overcome. That's a lot better than basically saying they are subhuman.
Why is it a 'failure' at all? Why should it need to be 'overcome'?
It's only a problem if you subscribe to the philosophy of the unfathomable protestants, with their inscrutable 'work ethic'.
Since the industrial revolution, society has needed fewer and fewer of its members to work in order to feed, clothe and house everyone. Why are you so keen to force work onto people who don't want it; to push employers to hire people that aren't desirable employees; and to punish those who cannot or don't want to work?
Why are you so committed to this bizarre philosophy that you think my description of people as 'not really cut out for work' is synonymous with saying that they are 'subhuman'? That's your assessment, not mine. Work, and the desire to work, are neither necessary nor sufficient to make someone human.
As I said in the post to which you're responding, every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives. How could you read that and believe that I was "basically saying they are subhuman"?
Why is it a 'failure' at all? Why should it need to be 'overcome'?
It's only a problem if you subscribe to the philosophy of the unfathomable protestants, with their inscrutable 'work ethic'.
Since the industrial revolution, society has needed fewer and fewer of its members to work in order to feed, clothe and house everyone. Why are you so keen to force work onto people who don't want it; to push employers to hire people that aren't desirable employees; and to punish those who cannot or don't want to work?
Why are you so committed to this bizarre philosophy that you think my description of people as 'not really cut out for work' is synonymous with saying that they are 'subhuman'? That's your assessment, not mine. Work, and the desire to work, are neither necessary nor sufficient to make someone human.
As I said in the post to which you're responding, every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives. How could you read that and believe that I was "basically saying they are subhuman"?
Buddy, no one really likes to work! It's just that everyone has different levels of motivation. I'm motivated, and I work at least 65 hours a week. But if could paid the same (with the same amount of future benefits); I'd sell and watch spongebob all day in a second!
People not worth hiring could be those with a poor work history at other companies. Maybe they have a history of being a bad team player, insubordination, dishonest, attendance issues, theft, criminal history, and etc.
Which is a personal failure, some being flawed, others perhaps being overcome by life problems. A case by case issue.
But to at least some degree it's a failure to have learned better.
Why is it a 'failure' at all? Why should it need to be 'overcome'?
It's only a problem if you subscribe to the philosophy of the unfathomable protestants, with their inscrutable 'work ethic'.
Since the industrial revolution, society has needed fewer and fewer of its members to work in order to feed, clothe and house everyone. Why are you so keen to force work onto people who don't want it; to push employers to hire people that aren't desirable employees; and to punish those who cannot or don't want to work?
Why are you so committed to this bizarre philosophy that you think my description of people as 'not really cut out for work' is synonymous with saying that they are 'subhuman'? That's your assessment, not mine. Work, and the desire to work, are neither necessary nor sufficient to make someone human.
As I said in the post to which you're responding, every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives. How could you read that and believe that I was "basically saying they are subhuman"?
Buddy, no one really likes to work! It's just that everyone has different levels of motivation. I'm motivated, and I work at least 65 hours a week. But if could paid the same (with the same amount of future benefits); I'd sell and watch spongebob all day in a second!
Some people aren't really cut out for work. That's not a problem, unless your society fails to support those people.
And every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives.
Frankly I would much rather my taxes paid to give the unemployable the things they need to live, than that the unemployable stole them from me (particularly at the heavy markdown and high ancillary costs that stolen goods imply).
But for most of them it's not an intrinsic failure, but how they were raised, and it can be overcome. That's a lot better than basically saying they are subhuman.
Why is it a 'failure' at all? Why should it need to be 'overcome'?
It's only a problem if you subscribe to the philosophy of the unfathomable protestants, with their inscrutable 'work ethic'.
Since the industrial revolution, society has needed fewer and fewer of its members to work in order to feed, clothe and house everyone. Why are you so keen to force work onto people who don't want it; to push employers to hire people that aren't desirable employees; and to punish those who cannot or don't want to work?
Why are you so committed to this bizarre philosophy that you think my description of people as 'not really cut out for work' is synonymous with saying that they are 'subhuman'? That's your assessment, not mine. Work, and the desire to work, are neither necessary nor sufficient to make someone human.
As I said in the post to which you're responding, every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives. How could you read that and believe that I was "basically saying they are subhuman"?
Nobody's able to take care of themselves for their entire life; Nor even in most cases for the majority of it. The ability to support yourself without any assistance from others is assuredly NOT a basic aspect of being alive, and I find it horrific that you have such a warped worldview as to accept such an absurd claim without question.Why is it a 'failure' at all? Why should it need to be 'overcome'?
It's a failure of a very basic aspect of being alive--being able to take care of yourself.
Fuck off with your petty insults. A person who is temporarily unable to support himself financially isn't a "leech" if he accepts assistance from others. You need to be FAR more critical in your reading of Ayn Rand - She's a fucking idiot; Don't emulate her if you don't want to be thought an idiot too.It's only a problem if you subscribe to the philosophy of the unfathomable protestants, with their inscrutable 'work ethic'.
It's a problem for anyone who doesn't feel like supporting leeches.
Yes. It should. You seem to have a VERY narrow view of what benefits society.Since the industrial revolution, society has needed fewer and fewer of its members to work in order to feed, clothe and house everyone. Why are you so keen to force work onto people who don't want it; to push employers to hire people that aren't desirable employees; and to punish those who cannot or don't want to work?
That effort should be used for the betterment of society.
Horseshit.Why are you so committed to this bizarre philosophy that you think my description of people as 'not really cut out for work' is synonymous with saying that they are 'subhuman'? That's your assessment, not mine. Work, and the desire to work, are neither necessary nor sufficient to make someone human.
Because anyone not disabled can care for themselves.
As I said in the post to which you're responding, every single last one of us is one of 'those people', for at least a part of our lives. How could you read that and believe that I was "basically saying they are subhuman"?
The only people that can't support themselves are the young and the disabled.
That's easy. We want more billionaires.What, in short, are we trying to achieve?
That's easy. We want more billionaires.What, in short, are we trying to achieve?
bilby said:A person who invents a 'must have' widget, that almost everyone wants to own, and is prepared to pay $10 for, has perhaps provided $10 of value to each of a hundred million customers; But that doesn't imply that the inventor is owed $1billion by society. We currently use that very simple arithmetic equality, but even then we recognise that a portion of the $1bn 'earned' in this way should simply cease to exist (ie be taxed, which is one of the simplest ways for a currency issuing government to destroy money). Nevertheless, some people become insanely wealthy. Nobody's owed a third private jet because of the tiny value placed on their work by a huge number of people. Certainly not while there are people without sufficient food.
How do you define one society as better (or worse) than another? Whether that's an assessment of the past vs the present vs a hoped-for (or to be guarded against) future; Or a comparison between contemporary societies in different places, we all seem to be able to point to extreme examples of societies we don't want to emulate, but it seems that nobody agrees on what we actually want to achieve.