• @[email protected]
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    99 months ago

    I think any definition of UBI that does not contain enough to live off is not really UBI.

    And yes, to live off it, you’ll be shopping in Aldi, eating very basic food, and living in an area that isn’t very nice. I’m not suggesting you should be able to live on it in a nice area of SF or somewhere else with ludicrous property prices on UBI. It would probably involve some basic housing being thrown up by the government.

    We already live in a society with enough money to ensure everyone can live. It would just be nice to get rid of the cruelty in the lower rungs.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      We already live in a society with enough money to ensure everyone can live. It would just be nice to get rid of the cruelty in the lower rungs.

      Very well said. Unfortunately, for some, the cruelty is the point.

    • @Maggoty
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      29 months ago

      Should the people who work in SF be able to live there?

      One way to tackle the problem of wealth distribution is a UBI. Because it effectively just acts as an extra tax on the wealthy and a stimulus for the working class. It effectively rebalances the economy over time. It also helps people get better jobs, job training, and supports creative workers. Of course not everyone can get the “good jobs” but this makes the labor market more competitive so even the “bad jobs” will need to treat workers better to keep them.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        I mean yeah, they’ll have to. But they’ll have to be paid enough to live there. If you’re paying a janitor $80k because that’s what he needs to vac to floors and empty the bins, companies might start asking “what the fuck are we putting our businesses in SF for?”

        Remote work is another good equaliser there, but comes with the downside of remote workers also being available overseas and a lot cheaper.