daarthvaader t1_j3ck8ta wrote
Reply to comment by AnneBancroftsGhost in I asked chatgpt to write a UN resolution in favor of universal basic income, and this is what it returned. by AnneBancroftsGhost
That is great chatGPT found a solution for funds. I have a very dumb question , if everybody or most of the people are getting basic income , who would work for the corporations and if those companies don’t have work force , how would they make money and pay into the system ? I fail to comprehend this part of the equation
katsumojo t1_j3ckyv4 wrote
My understanding is that universal basic income would be enough to cover the essentials: food, housing, heat, clothing, maybe internet, etc... There wouldn't be enough in the funding to do much more than that. If you wanted things like vacations, restaurant outings, extracurricular activities, to have enough money to buy a house instead of rent, nice clothes, etc.. you would have to work to create that kind of income. The idea is most people want those things and would be willing to work for them.
FinalJuggernaut_ t1_j3cotxy wrote
lol
The only issue with this is that the people who came up with this "idea" had no prior work experience, no relevant education, and no relevant background.
minotaur05 t1_j3cpfwt wrote
Any source for that statement?
FinalJuggernaut_ t1_j3cty4n wrote
lol
My mind. I understand, you aren't used to thinking, but you are more than welcome to try and prove me wrong.
I'll wait.
TricksterWolf t1_j3cwvzq wrote
you forgot to add the "lol" this time, which makes it less likely that people will realize your insult is due to low self-esteem and rage at opinions which differ from yours
[deleted] t1_j3d16mi wrote
[removed]
MiserableTonight5370 t1_j3crysz wrote
You are wildly incorrect. My only question is whether you made this up or read/heard it somewhere.
FinalJuggernaut_ t1_j3ctolx wrote
lol
Care to prove me wrong?
MiserableTonight5370 t1_j3cwgy7 wrote
First: you are the one who made the claim, if we're being rational it's on you to support your claim.
But since it's so incredibly easy to demonstrate how wrong you are, I'll take a few seconds to educate you in front of the rest of the thread. A few seconds of review on the UBI wikipedia page shows:
Julius Caesar implemented a 100 denarii UBI for common roman citizens (https://books.google.com/books?id=aSmr_bVR2-kC).
He had a full-time job I think. May have had a bit of education.
Saint Thomas More wrote about a fictional society that explored the concept in Utopia (What Money Can Buy: The promise of a universal basic income – and its limitations, The Nation magazine). He had some education: he was a lawyer, judge and statesman.
Juan Luis Vive's, who was advocating a municipal -level UBI in Spain before Thomas Paine and others picked up the theme was educated at the university of Paris, and worked as a professor at some of the most distinguished universities in Europe at the time.
Most of the modern thinkers like Bertrand Russel and C.H. Douglass who publicly advocates for something like UBI had degrees.
If you'd like to take the time to see the magnitude of your wrongness, you can peruse this list too: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_advocates_of_universal_basic_income . There are a lot of people with jobs and letters after their names on that list.
If I've sounded a little bit harsh here, it's because I want to emphasize your intellectual laziness, and try to encourage you and others not to make unsupported claims then incorrectly place the burden of proof on people who rightly call them out. If society operated the way you're operating, we would be in a lot of trouble.
Do better.
FinalJuggernaut_ t1_j3czeww wrote
>First: you are the one who made the claim, if we're being rational it's on you to support your claim.
Proving negative is kinda hard, have to come up with loads of examples.
​
>But since it's so incredibly easy to demonstrate how wrong you are, I'll take a few seconds to educate you in front of the rest of the thread. A few seconds of review on the UBI wikipedia page shows:
Beautiful.
​
>Julius Caesar implemented a 100 denarii UBI for common roman citizens (https://books.google.com/books?id=aSmr_bVR2-kC).
>
>He had a full-time job I think. May have had a bit of education.
Indeed. And also he had a huge empire, all of which worked very hard to allow roman citizens, who comprised maybe 1% of population, their UBI.
lol
Great example - millions enslaved to provide for a few.
Also, worked really well.
​
>Saint Thomas More wrote about a fictional society that explored the concept in Utopia (What Money Can Buy: The promise of a universal basic income – and its limitations, The Nation magazine). He had some education: he was a lawyer, judge and statesman.
No relevant education or experience whatsoever. If he was digging ditches, his opinion could've been more relevant.
​
>Juan Luis Vive's who was advocating a municipal -level UBI in Spain before Thomas Paine and others picked up the theme was educated at the university of Paris, and worked as a professor at some of the most distinguished universities in Europe at the time.
Wow. A whole professor. I'm almost impressed. But how good was he at constructing bridges? Huh?
​
>Most of the modern thinkers like Bertrand Russel and C.H. Douglass who publicly advocates for something like UBI had degrees.
lol
Again: no work experience, no relevant education, and no relevant background.
​
>If you'd like to take the time to see the magnitude of your wrongness, you can peruse this list too: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_advocates_of_universal_basic_income . There are a lot of people with jobs and letters after their names on that list.
A lot of people, none of which ever held a hammer in their hands. Their opinions are simply worthless.
​
>If I've sounded a little bit harsh here, it's because I want to emphasize your intellectual laziness, and try to encourage you and others not to make unsupported claims then incorrectly place the burden of proof on people who rightly call them out. If society operated the way you're operating, we would be in a lot of trouble.
>
>Do better.
Thanks, I'm fine.
MiserableTonight5370 t1_j3d2f2t wrote
The fact that you can't back up an over-broad negative claim is a clue that you should not make it. That's exactly my point.
And I'm confused by your approach to intellectual gatekeeping. Does discussing the economics of universal basic income require expertise at economics and all other types of expertise don't provide any credibility at all, or do you need to be a hammer-wielding bridge builder? I'd wager that the number of economics PhDs that have sizeable construction experience is low enough that if we let only them discuss economic policy we'd have a pretty short discussion. More directly, it feels like you're moving the goalposts though: you said that the people who came up with 'the idea' had no work experience or relevant education. You didn't say that they had no 'construction' experience or 'economics' education, you said work experience or relevant education. Someone with public policy education who works in government has both relevant education and relevant work experience to discuss the idea of public policy like UBI. If you disagree, I'd love to know what criteria exactly you were implying when you made your over-broad, negative, impossible to support claim.
FinalJuggernaut_ t1_j3d8pv9 wrote
>The fact that you can't back up an over-broad negative claim is a clue that you should not make it. That's exactly my point.
I don't think so.
​
>Does discussing the economics of universal basic income require expertise at economics and all other types of expertise don't provide any credibility at all, or do you need to be a hammer-wielding bridge builder?
Discussing the economics of UBI requires very solid understanding of how the real world is working, and obtaining such knowledge without working in fields that physically create all the wealth is not possible.
​
>I'd wager that the number of economics PhDs that have sizeable construction experience is low enough that if we let only them discuss economic policy we'd have a pretty short discussion.
And this is one of the main causes of the weak state of the global economy.
​
> More directly, it feels like you're moving the goalposts though: you said that the people who came up with 'the idea' had no work experience or relevant education. You didn't say that they had no 'construction' experience or 'economics' education, you said work experience or relevant education.
Yeah, my bad, should've formulated it better.
​
>Someone with public policy education who works in government has both relevant education and relevant work experience to discuss the idea of public policy like UBI. If you disagree, I'd love to know what criteria exactly you were implying when you made your over-broad, negative, impossible to support claim.
Well, to be precise, everybody have a right to discuss ideas. The question is whose opinions should have more value that others.
In my opinion someone with public policy education who works in government is concerned by their career only. In my opinion government employees should not have a right to vote, let alone make decisions like these, also because they never bear any responsibility.
Criteria?
Hmmm.... Lemme see...
Intelligent humans that have experience either directly managing large masses of other humans or have studied human intelligence, human evolution and human history.
Oh, and no, no politicians and no gov. employees.
MiserableTonight5370 t1_j3dc65b wrote
Well, your revised position is much more reasonable. Score one for discourse.
I still completely disagree with your insistence that making a claim you can't support well is a good idea. C'est la vie.
I think it would be better if only intelligent people made decisions for other people, but I have yet to hear any ethical, or maybe moral is the better word, ways to enforce any kind of such system in practice.
My last little quibble with your revised criteria is that there are very few types of management of large masses of people that can't be considered a form of government/politics. Seems like you're triangulating on the CEOs or owners of large companies. If that's the case, then I'll politely disagree with you - I would trust academics with less vested interest to provide more intelligent and more objective positions on economic policy. Important to note: I said LESS vested interest (than corporate magnates), not none at all. I would say that rank-and-file academia have less vested interest in economic policy than the average CEO, as an example.
Completely agree that politicians' opinions on economic policy are not worth repeating, much less forming one's own opinion on.
Edit: p3, 'little' => 'few'
FinalJuggernaut_ t1_j3dfrhx wrote
>Well, your revised position is much more reasonable. Score one for discourse.
Cheers :)
​
>I still completely disagree with your insistence that making a claim you can't support well is a good idea. C'est la vie.
That's completely fine. I'm not upset XDXD
​
>I think it would be better if only intelligent people made decisions for other people, but I have yet to hear any ethical, or maybe moral is the better word, ways to enforce any kind of such system in practice.
Which is precisely the reason why I haven't mentioned morals or ethics.
​
>My last little quibble with your revised criteria is that there are very few types of management of large masses of people that can't be considered a form of government/politics. Seems like you're triangulating on the CEOs or owners of large companies. If that's the case, then I'll politely disagree with you - I would trust academics with less vested interest to provide more intelligent and more objective positions on economic policy. Important to note: I said LESS vested interest (than corporate magnates), not none at all. I would say that rank-and-file academia have less vested interest in economic policy than the average CEO, as an example.
Which is why I mentioned direct management. I should've clarified - people who know by name all who they manage. Owners of successful hitech startups (leave alone Musk - he's tad too big XDXD), operations managers in corporations and such.
Why do I tend to trust this kind of people? Because they tend to be very rational and they know people. Academia are too detached, they live in their academic world and tend to believe that everybody else is just like them, maybe less educated.
Also, academia is very interested in ensuring their own employment. Contrary to businessmen, who can just make money out of thin air, literally buying lemons and selling lemonade if there's nothing better, academia isn't really capable of surviving in the wild and depends on government donations.
katsumojo t1_j3cygxb wrote
The most famous proponent of this idea, Andrew Yang, went to Columbia University and Brown University. Seems pretty educated to me. And you can do a quick Google search on his work experience, he has it.
The point of universal basic income is multifold- give people a safety net so we have fewer homeless people, recognize and make possible the work of stay-at-home parents, invest money in the masses because we know that when the masses have money it is the most liquid; in other words, poor people spend their money more quickly than rich people--> when people spend money business does well--> when business does well there are more jobs available and the economy does well.
There is real thought and strategy behind the approach, the problem is it offends the American notion of "work for everything you have." The real problem is hard work alone barely pays for people's basic needs.
My grandfather was a Culligan salesmen..yes, he sold the giant tanks of water door to door. My grandmother was a homemaker. They were also parents to 7 children that all were cared for enough that they could grow to adulthood and live lives of their own. CAN YOU IMAGINE, someone working ANY modern day job and supporting a family of 9 on their own? The game has changed and the rules need to follow suit.
FinalJuggernaut_ t1_j3d11eu wrote
"Andrew Yang is American businessman, attorney, lobbyist, and politician"
Are you fucking kidding me?
>The point of universal basic income is multifold
The problem that the math just doesn't work.
>My grandfather was a Culligan salesmen..yes, he sold the giant tanks of water door to door. My grandmother was a homemaker. They were also parents to 7 children that all were cared for enough that they could grow to adulthood and live lives of their own. CAN YOU IMAGINE, someone working ANY modern day job and supporting a family of 9 on their own? The game has changed and the rules need to follow suit.
It depends where you live.
Back in the day US was the industrial powerhouse of the planet, today it is not.
In China, however, it is entirely possible, or in Vietnam. Planet isn't limited to US of A.
beereinherjar t1_j3cl26z wrote
Most people would want to work in order to get more than the basic income. Point is that it would give people a choice to live differently than we do today.
penguinino t1_j3ckt3r wrote
This assumes greater automation than we have today, obviating work for most. Those who choose to work would be paid in addition to UBI, incentivizing learning any remaining in-demand skills.
ianitic t1_j3cojr9 wrote
Also, as this is futurology and we see things studies/research that extend lifespans, the life extension could be something they price out of reach for non workers.
nrfx t1_j3cm6hh wrote
The goal of a basic income isn't to replace doing jobs.
Its to provide for the bare necessities for life.
The vast majority would continue to work to improve their station.
ChainmailleAddict t1_j3cl2qv wrote
Jobs would still exist and people would still work them, it's not as though UBI gives everyone enough to do nothing. This being said, jobs are disappearing and being automated away. Things stack up that one day, we won't need to work any more, and this should be a good thing if we make the ultra-wealthy stop hoarding our excess labor.
Tech-Teacher t1_j3clbn7 wrote
I mean. If you get a basic income of 16,000$ a year.. do you plan to just stop working? Would it help with the basics. Yep. Does it help you achieve all of your goals and dreams. Nope. Most people will still work. Some people will work less.
BrightestofLights t1_j3clkla wrote
People who want more money than the UBI? Obviously?,
borderlineidiot t1_j3clwwk wrote
The basic income would be spent by the recipients which trickles up through the economy back into the pockets of the super wealthy people and corporations. Money trickles up not down.
Hydra57 t1_j3cn3k4 wrote
One city did this as an experiment with a sample of families willing to participate. Everyone still worked, it just made their lives more comfortable and stress free, especially those who were so close to broke that missing work meant losing their place of residence.
DropsTheMic t1_j3cp5mo wrote
People are largely incentivized by things above and beyond basic subsistence which is all UBI promises. Where is the carrot if there is no stick? That's pretty much the summation of your question I think. Vacations, nicer vehicles, money to spend on private ventures and passion projects, art, music, etc. Essentially everything that already incentivizes people beyond keeping their rent paid and alive in reasonably good health.
MiserableTonight5370 t1_j3csqw2 wrote
The fundamental problem of economics is that human wants are infinite and resources are not. If you accept the most fundamental concept of economics, then you understand that the economy is not driven by the finite requirements of the needs of individual humans to live, but the infinite demands of human wants.
I have never seen a UBI proposal that suggests the amount of income should be more than a reasonable estimate of the needs of a person for basic subsistence, health care, and in some cases postsecondary education.
This is the underlying principle behind all of the other answers here, like 'people won't just stop working because they have $16k/year', etc...
jdith123 t1_j3ct7x2 wrote
People who wanted a little more than just basic food and shelter.
I’d still do my job. Basically, I teach reading to kids. The systems that pay me to do that would probably change dramatically, but I wouldn’t want to stop doing that work. It’s a job, so parts of it suck, but it’s also a really great thing to do, and it makes me feel good.
Also, I like my nice things. I like my expensive hobbies and fancy vacations and travel. I want to buy a bottle of wine and go out to dinner. I want to pay for extra stuff.
sergpepper t1_j3gfhpm wrote
It would be good if this AI could manage the entire financial system of all the nations of the world, so that there would be no wars, greedy dictators and state crooks. I think there was a book by William Gibson about this.
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