• @AllonzeeLV
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    11 months ago

    The United States was dealt its final blow half a century ago at the hands of an Alzheimer’s patient by the name of Ronald Reagan.

    This is the necrotic stage.

  • @moriquende
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    6611 months ago

    A human is definitely generating more value than the parking space, it’s just most of it is being stolen by greedy capitalists.

    • @[email protected]
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      011 months ago

      In Soviet Russia, parking space never earn more than human.

      But mostly because the waiting list for a Lada was 10 years long.

  • @Monkey_d_luffy
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    4511 months ago

    They’re making us lose our reasons for living. Life’s too hard and not worth it at this stage. Feel bad for all the babies born everyday. The majority of them are going to have hard lives and grow up too hate every second of it most of the rest of the world.

    • ineedaunion
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      2011 months ago

      Then we need to bring violence to boardrooms and executives homes.

    • @[email protected]
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      1911 months ago

      Turn that sadness into anger, turn the anger in a deep, boiling rage. You know where to direct it, dismantle the whole system little by little. You know who are the guilty ones, we all do

      • @orrk
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        711 months ago

        oh, you don’t think that the capitalist don’t want that? who do you think is going to take power in a revolution?

        look back, it is always an authoritarian aristocracy.

        if you want to make the world better for the working class, we need to enact reforms, not revolutions.

        • @Mayoman68
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          211 months ago

          However it is also openly obvious that reforms(at least in north america and europe) often result in backsliding. You also forget that while the revolutionary regimes often had issues with corruption and committing atrocities, they often were a million times better than the equally or moreso brutal regimes that came before them.

          • PugJesus
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            311 months ago

            But they often also lead to backlash, such as the Reign of Terror leading to the Thermidorian Reaction and its successors; or the SovUnion being so unpopular amongst its vassal states that they eventually chose to just… quit cooperating, leading to major degradation of serious socialist movements worldwide and the initiation of the ugly pillaging that was so-called ‘shock therapy’ in the 90s.

            Being better than what came before it is not the same as making a better future.

            I get it. God, I get it. The guillotines are hungry, and I would love to see them fed. Saint-Just is my spirit animal. But I also realize that bloodletting, even when it is the most just result, is not always the most morally correct one. As satisfying as seeing guilty heads roll may be, I would rather see the lives of the innocent improved - in as sustainable a manner as possible. Sometimes that means violence. Sometimes it does not.

          • @orrk
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            110 months ago

            nah, the revolutionary nations were often WORSE than the people they replaced, and generally only were better for a certain amount of people.

  • 🦄🦄🦄
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    4211 months ago

    But have you considered there is also less demand for you than a downtown Toronto parking space?? Ha! Check mate!

    • PugJesus
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      2611 months ago
      1. I dispute that, you haven’t seen me striptease yet

      2. More that it’s a matter of negotiation leverage. Rich folk find it hard to outwait other rich folk regarding property prices. Poor folk, though? We have a matter of days before we collapse because of our silly ‘human needs’ and such, which makes it imperative that we be kept desperate, lest our pay even vaguely reflect the amount of surplus value extracted from us.

      • 🦄🦄🦄
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        711 months ago

        So what I am hearing is, not only is that parking space a harder worker than you, that pulled itself up by the boot straps concrete slabs, it is also a more talented negotiator than you. Shame.

    • @[email protected]
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      911 months ago

      If you squat the parking space does that mean you can raise demand for yourself enough to receive higher compensation than the parking space alone?

  • @[email protected]
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    2711 months ago

    I was looking at Toronto real estate just for the lulz the other day… 150k$ to buy a parking space… First thing I found surprising is that you can buy a parking space (wtf?) But even more surprising… They sell for more than I paid for my condo 10 minutes from downtown Ottawa 10 years ago 😐

    • @HeyJoe
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      1211 months ago

      If you could rent it out for the 27 an hour like they stated above you could start seeing a return in as little as 5 years. Sounds like a great investment.

      • @[email protected]
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        911 months ago

        It’s an amazing investment because it pays for itself AND its value will increase because managers are idiots and are bringing people back to the office.

  • @[email protected]
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    2611 months ago

    This is the feudal stage of capitalism where the rich recaptured all the real estate and are making tons of profit just sitting on it.

    • PugJesus
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      511 months ago

      Feudalism>Mercantilism>Capitalism>Feudalism

      I don’t think I like this sequence.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 months ago

      Which is pretty interesting because the “God” of capitalism, Adam Smith, hated landlords.

  • @[email protected]
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    1011 months ago

    Don’t open a business downtown unless you have a damn good reason for it. It’s a massive real estate monopoly.

    • TigrisMorte
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      1011 months ago

      Yeah, um, we are going to need y’all to return to the office for, um, “productivity” reasons.

  • Armok: God of Blood
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    811 months ago

    Just looked at a studio apartment at my old complex. It’s $2,995 a month. About $100 a day, assuming a 30-day month. You need to pay hotel prices just to live in a studio apartment (with a lease) here.

  • @Jeanschyso
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    -211 months ago

    Welp, just don’t drive then if you can’t afford to park the car.

  • @DaveFuckinMorgan
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    -711 months ago

    Let me ask you all something: does an increase in demand for something raise the price for it, or decrease the price?