• @[email protected]
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    17310 months ago

    Maybe gen a will be the ones with the balls to actually rise up, set everything on fire, and kill the people responsible for destroying everything. Because of the rest of us are just sitting around complaining.

    And yes, I admit, I’m in that category.

    • @[email protected]
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      9110 months ago

      It looks like if gen Z’s massive wave of unionization doesn’t work that’ll be the case. Gen A is likely the water war generation unless we clean up our act enough for it to be gen ß

      • @[email protected]
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        2710 months ago

        Occupy Wall Street started strong but quickly decended into uncoordinated nonsense. The initial message was simple, popular, and actionable about how it’s bullshit that global austerity and government cutbacks were hurting the 99% whilst the 1% who caused the crash got off scott free with massive bailouts and tax cuts.

        Because it was a “leaderless” collective action it quickly got occupied itself by all sorts of weird and wacky movements who diluted the message and gave the right wing media all the ammo they could ever want to paint the whole thing as “just some crazy hippies chatting shit about communism” or whatever.

        It’s pretty typical of movements on the left unfortunately. Everyone wants to be super inclusive so all ideas are equally important and you can’t just dismiss ideas as not being relevant without creating a load of infighting. The alternative however means people with bad ideas (ones who often have more time and energy to boot) can easily take over the conversation and your whole message gets diluted, confused, and easily disarmed by the media.

        • Riskable
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          710 months ago

          I think the left’s problem isn’t inclusiveness (in things like this) it’s the inability to give power to “strong” leadership. The same mental firewalls that prevent those on the left from falling victim to mountebanks keeps them from letting others speak on their behalf.

          It also creates mental roadblocks for anyone on the left who tries to lead. “How can I speak for these people? I am not one of them.” That’s not a limitation of inclusiveness it’s just empathy. So when anyone on the left challenges a left wing leader with anything, really that leader–if they are truly left leaning–will not fight back without near certainty about their position.

          This makes it easy for a left wing leader to denounce the illogical and/or racist positions from those on the right but extremely difficult to take a stand on issues where everything sucks like Israeli/Palestinian conflict or immigration. This leaves them open for charlatans to point to them and say, “See? They’re weak!” Which is the exact thing the right hates and fears from left wing leaders.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            Maybe inclusiveness wasn’t the right word to use, but your second and third paragraphs are exactly what I meant. It’s because we want to make sure everyone’s voices are hard and ideas are considered that movements end up standing for everything and nothing at the same time. To me creating that space and opportunity for all ideas and people is inclusivity, which is a great thing overall but can make affecting change difficult when your opposition all fall into line behind “strong” leaders.

      • @[email protected]
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        310 months ago

        We need a raised militia in open, violent rebellion against the police and national guard. Anything less than that is theater.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Lol I’m a millennial too I definitely remember that and it’s not what I’m talking about at all. They just stood around yelling for the most part.

    • FenrirIII
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      3410 months ago

      I have been educating my child on unions and workers’ rights. When he’s old enough, we move on to the proper engineering and maintenance of guillotines.

    • @[email protected]
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      1210 months ago

      It is getting to the point that is the only option. Voting doesn’t matter, protesting doesn’t matter, complaining doesn’t matter. Millennials were raised that those are the processes, we have come to realize they don’t work and our kids are being raised with the understanding that that doesn’t work. If they want things to change, and it literally HAS to, that is what needs to happen. Either accept the status quo or forcefully change it. If I understand history, that is the most American thing you can do.

    • @[email protected]
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      1010 months ago

      The funny thing is that we have politicians here in Australia that complain about “woke” environmentalists standing up for the environment by sitting down on the road. They’re trying to have them labelled as terrorists for simply sitting down in the street.

      Meanwhile in France, Farmers who are angry about stopping of diesel concessions are setting things on fire, blocking streets with tractors and dumping manure and dirt into the street to block public servants responsible into buildings.

      The point is two fold, French have always done protests better. And the west conservatives have a massive raging boner for eroding ones rights to protest.

      • @[email protected]
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        510 months ago

        I support protesting wholeheartedly, but blocking a road is among the most moronic ways to protest I can think of.
        They are blocking emergency vehicles, people going to work, people doing errands, visiting family, goods being transported etc.
        There is a reason people get pissed off and pull them off of the road themselves. It does absolutely nothing to further their cause.
        It doesn’t even effect the people they protest against.

        Imagine missing your kids show, mothers dying breath or the flight to your long awaited vacation and family visit because someone couldn’t think of a more appropriate way to protest than sitting down and being an absolute butthole.

        • Ian@Cambio
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          1210 months ago

          Isn’t the inconvenience literally the point though?

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            I don’t call people potentially dying an inconvenience.
            They have no moral right to decide wether or not people make it to where they are going.

            So what do they hope to achieve?
            If it is awarenes, then there are much better ways of doing it

            • Ian@Cambio
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              710 months ago

              Just wondering if you’ve ever participated in a protest or this is just an academic exercise. In my experience well behaved protests are basically ineffective. It’s true that you can actually end up vilifying the cause in the eyes of people that you’ve inconvenienced.

              But that creates social pressure on our leaders to address the problem. Either by compromise with the protests demands or clearing them out by force.

              I get that it may block the direct path of an ambulance potentially. But most gps algorithms when they see a ton of stationary phones in the street interpret that as traffic and try to route around it.

              At the end of the day, yes there is the small potential for harm to a few individuals, but (hopefully) the benefits to a larger group offset that.

              I went to UT and there were protests in the street all the time. It always inconvenienced me and I actually came to blows with a few of the protesters, but they should know that’s a possibility going into it. There’s really no right or wrong here. There’s only large organized group against a few impacted drivers.

              • @[email protected]
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                210 months ago

                I appreciate your arguments but respectfyully disagree.
                A GPS guided detour should not be necessary for vital social functions to operate.
                I also dislike the small potential for harm to a few individuals when there are better ways to get the point across.

                Block construction.
                Occupy offices and locations.
                March.
                Send letters and run awareness campaigns.
                Vote.

                Do anything you can that makes people see you. Just don’t block the road. To me that is too risky. If everybody would protest like that to achieve their political goals we would live in total anarchy.

                Hope my opinions make sense even though you might disagree.

                • Ian@Cambio
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                  310 months ago

                  Totally. No animosity here. Never considered occupying an office.

    • @[email protected]
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      110 months ago

      I’m gonna be honest, I’m a zoomer (ahhh yes I’m a zoomer, I’m a zoomer, yippee! Everyone look at me, I’m the zoomer) and, looking towards the future, my future, I’m already kinda there. I just think we both haven’t quite hit the critical mass where everyone else is at that point, yet, and I think that the narrative about, you know, why things suck, I think that’s been co-opted with a mixed level of success, forcing people to feel “fine” with their circumstances, or, forcing people to feel personally responsible for their circumstances, as the case may be. I also think there’s a good amount of cynicism about standing up to the US government and institutions, since we’ve been fed a shitload of stuff against that, and then, you know, we’re all fucked and have limited resources and whatever. I also think people are probably too nice for their own good, most people just kind of want to chill, even if that means they’re actually not allowed to chill because they have to work 2 jobs and have no energy and one financial emergency could wipe them out instantly.

      I dunno, I feel pretty cynical, but I also feel like things will probably get at least a little bit worse, before they get better. I just hope they get worse in the right way, instead of in the whole like, world ending kind of way. Or, localized apocalypse, kind of way, more likely.

  • @[email protected]
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    13310 months ago

    This seems like a good place to post this reminder that in the last 50 years income has lost to inflation by 137 points. That’s decades of prices rising faster than wages. It’s not rocket science. They walked away with all of the productivity gains, and gave the entire country a pay cut at the same time. You want a boring dystopia? How about stealing your paycheck a couple percentage points a year until suddenly we realize we can’t afford to live without 3 full time incomes in one household.

    • @[email protected]
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      8510 months ago

      Where I’m from, the median house price has risen 600% relative to the median income in the past 50 years.

      That means the deposit we pay today is the equivalent of the entire 30 year mortgage of the people calling you lazy.

      • @[email protected]
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        3410 months ago

        Yup, the 137 points is just “core” inflation. Education, Housing, Food, and Cars all come in over that. Which is fine because those aren’t necessary in the US right?

      • @[email protected]
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        1210 months ago

        And yet nearly anyone IRL you point this out to spouts some form of free market propaganda bullshit.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          True - that’s been the response to pricing getting out of control rather than addressing the fundamental issues with the economy.

    • @[email protected]
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      2410 months ago

      Without violent pushback there is no reason at all to improve things. Cant afford to live?.. fuck you, we’ll find someone who can. Piss off, peasant.

      • @[email protected]
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        2010 months ago

        All we would need is 3 days of a general strike with at least 10% participation.

        But unfortunately there are several factors that prevent this, some human nature, some deliberately manufactured.

        1. Almost no one I know can afford missing a week’s worth of work: This is manufactured with stagflation and at-will work laws

        2. The rich inflaming radical partisanship with traditional and social media to distract from who the real enemy is, reducing social cooperation

        3. American culture has become largely an ‘observer culture’, where the world is treated as a thing to passively watch while feeling disconnected, this is probably the worst contributor.

        So many of the labor movement gains our forefathers bled and died for have been trampled by an owner class hell bent on recapitulating european nobility on American soil and they have been WILDLY successful the last 30 years.

        Either we organize a general strike, or there will be food riots within a decade.

        • @[email protected]
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          1010 months ago

          Shawn Fain (United Auto Workers president) has been calling for unions across every industry to align their contracts to end at the same time on May 1st, 2028 (International Labor Day), specifically so that we can prepare for a general strike. Gives the already organized unions time to build up a strike fund and non-organized folks time to get organized.

          • @[email protected]
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            110 months ago

            If there was an IT workers union with presence in my state I would absolutely do the same, though to be fair I could probably just take a week off that might not end until the owner class comes humble to the table.

            • @[email protected]
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              310 months ago

              Might be worth your while to look into Locals in your area that aren’t necessarily IT focused unions. Some unions (like the Teamsters and others) will still help you organize under their union even though they typically represent workers in a specific industry. I don’t have an office workers union local in my neck of the woods, but I’ve been giving it some thought as well.

        • @[email protected]
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          110 months ago

          People who can’t afford three days off work will certainly fare well by not participating in a general strike.

          /S

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            If I had never sold or lost a single bitcoin I mined I could afford to pay for a few thousand people to cover the costs, even more for the most needed protesters, the fast food workers. If I were a billionaire I would literally break my fortune to pay for every fast food worker in the U.S. (in their pockets, to be clear) to take a week off.

            I would live on ramen and burning newspaper for warmth if it would guarantee that even 5% of the fast food and restaurant workforce took off for a week.

      • @[email protected]
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        810 months ago

        One percent relative what the market was at the starting point.

        The market today is 237 % of starting point (probably 1990).

    • @[email protected]
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      710 months ago

      Inflation isn’t prices growing faster than wages, it’s just prices growing in general. Don’t let anyone tell you that gentle inflation is bad for poor people.

      Debtors gain from inflation because they pay their fixed debts with currency worth less. When interest rates are low, refinance or borrow at low fixed rates. When inflation rises, your fixed debt costs go down in real terms.

      If you want wages to increase, support a higher minimum wage.

      • @[email protected]
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        2610 months ago

        This isn’t just inflation over 50 years. This is divergence in the inflation of wages and core inflation. So prices over all have risen by 137 points more than wages have risen. This isn’t the talk about inflation vs deflation vs death spirals. This is everything slowly becoming less affordable over time. And it really doesn’t matter if the money is worth less when the interest rate on the loan is far beyond inflation in the first place. You either pay it back quickly (monthly on a card) or watch it spiral out of control rapidly because adjustable rate loans work off of inflation and your wages didn’t go up to match. So now you have that much less money a month to buy food.

        Theoretically inflation is good for borrowers. In practice you need a certain base of money for that to be true. If you can’t cover increased costs over the life of the loan then inflation is going to take you behind the shed.

    • Obinice
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      110 months ago

      gave the entire country a pay cut

      Entire country? Which country? We’re talking about our whole western civilisation.

  • @[email protected]
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    8210 months ago

    After WW2 almost every other developed nation was in ruin. The US was “the only game in town” when it came to production. This caused US labor to be in high demand and priced at a premium compared to places like in Europe or Japan, who were more concerned about rebuilding than exporting goods.

    THIS is how a high school dropout could afford a house and a family. Because that high school dropout was basically your only option for labor. As those other countries finished rebuilding a lot manufacturing jobs left and things started to get “back to normal”.

    The US was in a unique position but like most things it was just squandered. Now the US is “regressing towards the mean”. This is going to be the new normal because the last 40-50 years was an exception.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      Europe was reduced to rubble, but my grandfathers, who were children during the war and after, both still managed to build a house, raise two kids each and set money aside; one of my grandmothers worked as a seamstress and those grandparents not only built houses for themselves and each kid, but essentially owned a whole block in our village. The other grandfather was the son of an orphan, still managed to do well.

      I had to take a job that requires great effort, stress and skill and keeps me away from home 40% of the time, it pays well but still I couldn’t dream to be able to do the same as they did.

    • @[email protected]
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      1910 months ago

      That’s true to a point. However bigger effects were the rise in executive compensation, the loss of labor and corporate regulations, and the resurgence of the shipping industry such that it was cheaper to ship from China than to make it in the US. It’s true that demand for US manufactured goods has fallen, but there’s no reason our current Service economy should struggle like it is.

    • @[email protected]
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      1710 months ago

      enlightened bit of context here.

      correct me if i’m wrong, but these are the colloquial “golden days” that so many want to return to, right? a period which undoubtedly contributed to the presumption of american exceptionalism in the minds of its citizens.

      if only there was a way to build a future out of transparency and sustainable systems instead of perpetuating our collective delusions.

    • @[email protected]
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      1510 months ago

      I think attributing the “good years” just to post war production is an incomplete explanation. The real issue is irresponsible private ownership and hobbling the value our economy can create.

      Creating true value in our work is possible. Once some types of work are done the output can continue to benefit our society for decades. But a confluence of decisions by private owners have meant often we don’t receive that benefit, and instead it’s siphoned away as profit.

    • DrQuickbeam
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      410 months ago

      I moved from the US to Italy, where everything is cheaper and better quality, and we get free healthcare, free college, retirement pension and six months paid maternity leave. All this on a 35% tax rate. Public daycare is about $300 a month, housing expenses are about half of what I paid in the US, and while groceries are about the same, they are all local, organic, non GMO and -get this - crops are grown for flavor rather than weight. Houses are smaller here and wages are usually lower, but working hours are less and less intense, and the pace of life is much chiller.

    • Obinice
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      210 months ago

      Thankfully we don’t live in the US then, but these same dark times are washing over us in Europe too :-(

    • @[email protected]
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      3510 months ago

      The Market Has Spoken: Get Fucked.

      A riveting exploration of the markets and society of the 21st century that will be written in 2200 lol

  • @[email protected]
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    7210 months ago

    We’re DINKs just starting to push into the “living a comfortable life” range. As in, we can do what we want and enjoy doing it.

    However, bringing a kid into that picture throws all of that away. Hospital bills, diapers, just the costs in general would wipe us out.

    We most likely wouldn’t qualify for any reimbursements and are already maximizing the ones we have such as house financing and taxes.

    I obsessively try to keep my “IOUs” to a minimum meaning aggressive mortgage payments and credit cards within the limitations of what I can pay off immediately but even that is difficult.

    The house needs work - new siding and windows, unexpected issues like the boiler dieing etc. And I’m generally fearful of what we’d find behind the siding (termites??? everything not up to code?) A new job like that could turn into $40-50K that we just don’t have floating around.

    I don’t go to doctors because I was afraid of what I might find. I’m lucky in the fact that my insurance is now pushing in the correct direction but still ludicrously expensive… And I mean ludicrously for the lack of services available that won’t cost me an additional fortune.

    The wife also works a must-commute 9-5. Not sure how she, or both of us would be able to handle childcare needs and not feel like we would be neglecting the kid.

    When would I ever be able to afford a kid in these situations?

    And I am lucky to say that we are DINKs that are getting paid relatively well… How can people that are below us in income survive having kids?

  • @[email protected]
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    6410 months ago

    But there’s actually an outrageous amount of wealth in the west. It just needs to be redistributed.

    It’s not an easy problem to fix, but it’s relatively simple.

    • Cowbee [he/him]
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      3910 months ago

      Unfortunately, much of that wealth was stolen from the global south via colonization. Redistribution of ownership must be done at a global, international level.

  • @[email protected]
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    5810 months ago

    There are many things that need change, but fixing the housing prices isn’t complicated, it’s just unpopular. You just need to take make speculating on housing as an asset very expensive. This will drive down the demand from non owner occupiers (businesses). It will also reduce the value of the largest asset most people own. People who invested so much into owning a home with the expectation that it will appreciate aren’t going to support policies that do the opposite.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      We should’ve been taxing homes or land that people own but are not their primary residence, from the start.

      It would be super easy to implement, and flexible - if housing prices are too high for 75% of the population, you raise those taxes little by little and the problem eventually sorts itself out. If it’s no longer a problem, you reduce the taxes.

      • @[email protected]
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        2210 months ago

        Or you keep those taxes the same and use the money to reinforce social programs to make sure no one in your area ever has to go homeless or hungry again.

          • @[email protected]
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            410 months ago

            The commenter I replied to said"when it’s no longer a problem" to lower the taxes again, I’m suggesting to not lower them again. People who have multiple homes should be paying maximum taxes on all luxury items- homes, cars, airplanes, income, everything possible, and that money should be used to support social programs.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      We already have first, primary, and only home exceptions to many things. There’s no reason Frank and Martha’s house should be any less valuable. The problem is housing as speculation is causing houses to be priced higher than their real value.

  • @[email protected]
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    5210 months ago

    I’m not advocating violence, of course, because that’s illegal both on this platform and in real life.

    However, the history of humanity has demonstrated that powerful people need to be publicly executed in order for there to be sea change in economic inequalities. When enough people have nothing to lose, said executions become inevitable.

    • @[email protected]
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      3210 months ago

      I’m not advocating violence, of course, because that’s illegal both on this platform and in real life.

      No it’s not.

      1. This platform’s policies do not have the force of law.

      2. Advocating for violence in general isn’t illegal; only specific threats are. (Trump, for example, is an idiot-savant at walking that fine line.)

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Also the advocating for violence rule has always been weird, because it’s rarely against the rules to advocate for war, even if it’s literally violence and also much much worse due to the scale and horror of it.

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        Yeah no, lemmy.world’s admins and mods are already infected with the alt-right taint, calling for eating the rich can and will get you banned.

    • @[email protected]
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      1910 months ago

      Don’t advocate violence. Instead, imply advocacy for violence.

      It’s not “let’s kill the rich”, it’s “it’d be a damn shame if someone killed the rich”

      It’s not “you’re morally obligated to burn that pipeline”, it’s “you’re morally obligated to burn that pipeline in Minecraft”

    • @[email protected]
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      710 months ago

      The only way to avoid this that I have ever been able to imagine would require our global society to somehow abandon the concept of currency. But that’s insane, of course, so we’re probably screwed…

      • PorkRoll
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        410 months ago

        Not insane. Insane is making up a system of what is worth keeping alive and then sacrificing life on Earth for that system. If we want to survive as a species, we might have to embrace a sort of gift economy.

        • @[email protected]
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          210 months ago

          Thanks for your reassurance. You know, given that the entire purpose of operating as a society is for everybody’s individual benefit, it seems kinda weird to reject a “gift economy” out of hand, doesn’t it? Basically, if each and every member of a society doesn’t benefit from how that society is organized, then said society has failed at it’s most primary function.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      A general strike of 3 days with 10% of the population participating would do a LOT more than public executions of billionaires.

      That said, there’s no fucking way you will get 10% of the population to agree on ANYTHING anymore because every single communication channel, forum, and social space is FILLED with people who actively create hostile, circular and unproductive environments. Either for the hell of it or at the behest of their corporate masters, the result is the same.

      We can’t do it the easy way, so we will suffer until the only choice is the hard way.

      All so 8 people can own half the fucking world.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        Assuming change involves violence you simply advocate for the change and “defending” your way of life or “taking back” or “sheparding society”. Violent Neo Nazis use this kind of rhetoric all the time to get people to do stupid shit and then escape accountability for winding them up. The absolute best way though? Thoroughly make your case and spread your ideology. When enough people feel like things aren’t going right and they can’t make change any other way, violence is the natural next inflection point.

        That all said. We really should be trying to do things peacefully. Political violence is fucking nasty and modern civil wars see things like militias taking control of small towns or neighborhoods to kill everyone they find because they think they voted the wrong way. If we could avoid that I’d be grateful, I really don’t need to witness a second factional battle with hundreds of people on either side right down a main street in a city.

        • @[email protected]
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          310 months ago

          I certainly don’t want civil war. I would, however, like to see a few billionaires fear for their life enough that they would lossen their death grip on the future health and wellbeing of the rest of the world’s inhabitants.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            It’s really hard for me to imagine a scenario where large groups of people are fighting on principle to protect billionaires.

  • @[email protected]
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    5010 months ago

    People who think of their children and want to give them the best future but don’t have the money for it don’t have children. People who don’t care about the future of their children, ended up having children.

    This leads to more children being born with shitty parents who don’t care about them.

    • @[email protected]
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      2510 months ago

      This is a bit unfair. There are lots of circumstances that result in children that weren’t planned. Lots of millennials grew up being told to just pop out the babies and the rest will happen. No the fuck it doesn’t. Not anymore anyway. Maybe that was true at some point but now what happens is they have to work harder than ever while daycare raises their kids. Meanwhile, they have to work a second job to just pay for daycare. When I was a kid I remember my mom getting a lot more gov assistance than seems to ever happen for people now. It was rough but we never had to worry a out keeping a roof over our heads or food on our table. Half those life changing programs are gone now. At least in my area.

  • @[email protected]
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    4910 months ago

    It’s not even about money anymore.

    I’m not positive that the world is going to be a comfortable place to live in at all in the next 40-80 years. I can’t be sure it’s morally acceptable to bring a new life into the world just to struggle until death. I know if I were given the choice I would have rather just not have been, it’s not worth struggling forever just to barely get by until the game changes yet again and you get knocked back down to the peg you started on.

    • @[email protected]
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      1210 months ago

      I can’t be sure it’s morally acceptable to bring a new life into the world just to struggle until death.

      That has been true for just about everyone throughout history.

      the game changes yet again and you get knocked back down to the peg you started on.

      People in the developed world not having kids is part of how they ‘win’ the game.

      The reason boomers were able to demand so much is because, as the name implies, they’re a big fucking cohort. They were politically influential from the time they could vote. Keeping birthrates depressed and shipping in cheap foreign labour is how those with power keep everyone else powerless.

      It’s a weird situation, but the way to improve living standards for future generations is to… have future generations. Even if you don’t feel like you can entirely support them now.

      • @[email protected]
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        410 months ago

        You’ll bring the “Population Bomb” doomers out, proving failed predictions never have consequences for the predictors since they can always say it will happen next year- since 1798

  • @[email protected]
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    4810 months ago

    It’s class warfare, plain and simple.

    The owner class has collectively decided there are too many worker class people and have gone out of their way to make sure that fewer and fewer are born, and to actively punish those who choose to have children.

    One thing I want to point out because I’m sure some rightie tightie always whitie is going to come by and say ‘Butbutbut… there are more millionaires now than evar!!!11!1one1!!’

    Yes.

    They are trust fund kiddies, nearly all of them.

    Upward mobility has been actively crippled by stagflation and several ‘once in a lifetime economic crises’ all in the span of 20 years.

    Even lower end millionaires are scared of this and claim they are struggling.

    Eat the rich, it is the only solution.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Yeah, because they know that they are the next ‘middle class’ that will be targeted for extraction.

        No joke I used to do consulting work for fast food franchise owner with 4 locations, the guy netted 800k a year with investments added.

        Caught him several times literally sweating in fear that he wasn’t going to be able to afford his kids private school and that he’d have to sell a franchise to stay above water.

        Would be nice to get some class solidarity with them, but they’ve spent generations spitting on us so I really don’t think they’ll ever join the cause.

        Hell, most of them blame US for the inflation that has made their money worth less.

    • @[email protected]
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      1910 months ago

      That’s giving them too much credit. They’re just greedy and trying to manipulate markets to hoard as much wealth as possible and they don’t care what happens to the workers.

      • @[email protected]
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        410 months ago

        Most of them, yeah, but the few capable and practiced in such actions whisper to the ignorant rich what they are to do.

        I’m not pretending the wealthy are a monolithic entity, but I’m also not pretending that 8 people hold more power for political and economic change than 5 billion combined. And even if only 1 of them is a eugenicist (protip: a fucktonne more of them are eugenicists) then they in their own hand has the power to shape politics and money to whatever the fuck their twisted will is.

        And some of them is to reduce the ‘excess population’.

    • @[email protected]
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      1510 months ago

      I agree with your stance on policy, but honest question here:

      I hear lots of theories that the ownership class are trying to limit reproduction of the classes below them.

      Why though? Don’t they want a huge population of desperate workers that keep fueling their profits and keeping their well-manicured hands from doing any real work?

      I dunno, I wonder sometimes if we apply Hanlon’s Razor and it really is an extreme example of incredibly shortsighted capitalist stupidity: “Yeah we’re running out of workers but that’s not a problem THIS quarter…”

      • @[email protected]
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        1210 months ago

        Why though? Don’t they want a huge population of desperate workers that keep fueling their profits and keeping their well-manicured hands from doing any real work?

        Did you not see the rich’s reaction to Kelly Osbourne’s tactless ‘who will clean our toilets?’ statement?

        If anything the last 40 years has taught me that the ultra wealthy have zero understanding of planning for a world beyond the next quarterly report.

        The reason ‘why’ is mostly petty af, they consider us unsightly and are annoyed that our brightest are out-competing their trust fund crotchfruit in prestigious education, and are fully aware of the coming economic collapse and want as few as possible rioters banging on the doors of their ultra lux survival compounds.

        I dunno, I wonder sometimes if we apply Hanlon’s Razor an

        No, all you need to do is talk to them about it without them knowing that you are poor. They will tell you with their own mouths.

        Class warfare has existed since before writing, and it exists wherever the wealthy are allowed to take power.

      • Herbal Gamer
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        410 months ago

        You want to keep them fighting amongs themselves so you limit their resources and opportunities. Don’t want a lot of them suddenly realising there’s a lot more of them than there are of you.

  • @[email protected]
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    4810 months ago

    It’s wealth inequality. Capital accumulates capital, and it actually means something because wealth is control, and things like housing that determine control over people’s lives are forms of wealth that get concentrated away from regular people along with everything else.

    IMO two main things need to happen:

    • redistribution of wealth
    • increase housing supply
    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      Oh but they actively took our paychecks too. This wasn’t just government welfare for the wealthy and the stock market. When they fired Janet because they only needed one worker instead of two thanks to new software? They didn’t pay Bob extra. That’s wealth just sucked up into the Executive and Shareholder realm. Then to add salt to the wound of doing two jobs they give Bob a December raise below inflation. (because of course there is still actually more that Bob has to do, the software didn’t fix everything.) So now they get Janet’s pay and the extra revenue they denied Bob, because of course their prices damn sure went up in step with inflation.

      This kind of fuckery has resulted in an estimated upwards transfer of around 47 Trillion dollars.

      • @[email protected]
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        610 months ago

        The thing I don’t like with that kind of argument is that it is inherently anti efficiency and anti progress. We don’t want jobs to be done in the most inefficient way just so that a lot of people can be paid to do them that way. We want them to be done efficiently and then everyone gets fed,… anyway because society values people over wealth.

        • @[email protected]
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          1810 months ago

          It’s anti progress to say “don’t improve productivity”, but it’s anti worker to say “don’t increase wages commensurate with improved productivity”.

        • @[email protected]
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          1010 months ago

          That’s not what they’re saying the issue is though, the issue is how it’s redistributed. In fact, what you’re saying quite literally is the living example of anti-progress.

          It could be fine in the current state if companies paid people fairly, but they don’t, any progress or efficiency that could have been made was stifled by the company pocketing the ex-employees wage. Rather than supporting the current employee by giving them a raise or a team of members to work with, it’s taken.

          To put it this way: Bob and Janet are janitors who split their work equally. A new tool the company bought is able to cut their workload down by 15% each. Now Bob and Janet only have 35% of their work, instead of 50%.

          A good workplace will support Bob and Janet in various ways, making them both more efficient by being able to accomplish more tasks.

          A bad workplace will fire one of them, making the work load for one of them to 70%, without supplemental pay.

          That 35% of value Janet brought is no longer going into the economy, it’s going into the corporate profit.

          It’s very efficient. That’s why corporations do it. Now one worker is extremely overworked and underpaid, but the job still gets done and the company makes more money? Sounds like a win.

        • @[email protected]
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          910 months ago

          It is not inherently anti-efficiency or anyi-progress. It is pointing out how those things have been corrupted by those in charge. In a more perfect world, Janet and Bob just work less hours due to the software while retaining their pay.

        • Pika
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          10 months ago

          I mean with the turnabout of current generation work ethic, I personally think that the current systems anti-productivity / efficiency in the first place. There used to be a worker loyalty and high work ethic but it’d increasing trends among millennial and Gen Z to just… not, and why would they when it’s been proven time and time again that the company culture is now replace first and hope the replacement is better or another annoying trend is replace and then not fill, with the expectation that the rest of the team will take on the extra workload for no additional pay.

          I think the only real solution to the issue is either an overall wealth tax, or regulation in the spectrum of the next tier has to be at within x amount of the previous or the highest tier must be within x amount of the lowest tier, which would allow for competition in the work hiring field still, raises would still be allowed to happen it’s just in order to raise one tier they have to raise the tiers below it as well.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          I think you are right, and it would be better not to focus on trying to micromanage specific business practices. You cannot write a good set of regulations that will prevent companies from siphoning wealth, because profit is the entire reason for existence of a company to begin with, and they will either find a way around it or stop functioning. Instead I think they should be allowed relative free reign, and the market allowed to do what it does, except that in the end a portion of the wealth extracted is taken and given back to the people, such that the level of concentration is kept stable instead of perpetually increasing.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 months ago

      increase housing supply

      It makes sense to me that governments should be providing their citizens with items at the base of the pyramid for Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.

      Air is everywhere, but governments mostly do have clean air regulations to make sure that air is breathable. Water is also typically provided by the city for every residence. It’s not free, but it’s pretty cheap. But, governments could be doing a lot more when it comes to shelter and food.

      It’s a bit strange that governments do spend a lot of effort / money on employment and personal security when they’re higher up the pyramid than basics like housing and food.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        It isn’t that strange if you think of us as being in a sort of situation of soft indentured servitude which is intentionally maintained.

  • @[email protected]
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    4810 months ago

    Die.

    Whenever I hear someone say “what are people supposed to do?”, that is what I remind myself is the default.

    When the rich have taken everything that they want, that is all that is leftover for literally everyone else.

    A magic utopia is not the default. That took effort to build, and now the ultra-wealthy are putting in effort to tear it down, so it is ludicrous to think that without effort that things will magically go back to the way they were. That is neither how inertia nor entropy work.

    Sorry this is upsetting, but it is the Truth. When Trump wins, it will get even worse, not better. Maybe we should do something about it.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    Reproduction isn’t a luxury item. It’s a survival need. The only reason that it’s viewed as such in western society is because our economic system is all kinds of screwed up. People have been brainwashed to consider survival, as a society, in terms of our economic systems rather than in terms of the actual people.

    • @[email protected]
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      1610 months ago

      Population growth can go too far, can’t it?

      Last I checked the world seems to be ending around us one day at a time as we march towards an ever higher global temperature, but if you want to say that’s normal and fine and we’re gonna be ok in 250 years then overpollution from overconsumption isn’t a problem yet.

      At what point does the earth become overpopulated? are we already there? if not… what’s the magic number?

      • @[email protected]
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        Uh, we are already past resource tipping points as human beings. This means we use more resources than the Earth is producing in a single year, which also means we cut into the resources that have been generated in other plentiful years (like old growth forests, fish populations, etc). If we efficiently utilized the space we have we could raise the bar for that resource tipping point, but we don’t.

        So yeah. TL;DR: it’s not necessarily that we’re overpopulated now but our population size + overconsumption = effective overpopulation.

    • @[email protected]
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      1510 months ago

      We outsourced the need for reproduction to the periphery. But we’re also a deeply racially anxious nation, such that 1.4B Han Chinese and another 1.4B East Indians fundamentally terrifies us as some kind of threat to… idk, Aristotle and Elvis Western Culture? Like humanity as we know it will be irrevocably changed if we don’t live like our grandparents did in the 1950s, with all that that entails.

      People have been brainwashed to consider survival, as a society, in terms of our economic systems rather than in terms of the actual people.

      The thing that sticks in my brain and keeps me up at night is the idea that I’m going to die without a family, alone and abandoned, in a country that sees me as little more than a wad of cash it can squeeze dry and dispose of.

      The elderly in this country are just another kind of commodity - a pass through by which some sales shits running a call center in the San Fernando Valley get enough to cover their mortgage notes. I’d like a group of people around me as I get into my senior years who see me as another human being, and I get the sense that this is going away right alongside health care and education and housing.

      • @[email protected]
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        1310 months ago

        Han Chinese

        You’ll have to forgive people for being cautious when presented with an ethnic supremacist state actively working towards global domination.

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          I feel like “The Han Chinese are naturally imperialist, taking over the world is in their blood” is the sort of shit I’d hear out of a Bond Villain from the 1960s.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            Letts : You know the person who had the greatest positive impact on the environment on this planet? Genghis Khan, because he massacred forty million people. There was no one to farm the land. Forests grew back. Carbon was dragged out of the atmosphere. And had this monster not existed, there’d be another billion of us today, jostling for space on this dying planet.

            Utopia (tv series)

    • @indistincthobby
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      1410 months ago

      Help me understand please, how is it a survival need? Maybe back in the 1800s when you were working a farm and needed to produce extra pairs of hands to help? Nowadays it seems to me that while it might be nice to have a proper family having children is a financial burden that many can’t bear, whether they want to or not

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        It’s a need in that it’s programmed into your biology, and most people can’t thrive without it. Surveys of middle-aged people find about 1 in 5 are child-free. Out of those, about 1 in 10 are so by choice. That leaves 49 in 50 that either have or wished, but couldn’t have, children.

        • DM_Gold
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          510 months ago

          That ratio seems off? 49 out of 50 people wished they could have children? I highly doubt that. If going by your logic you say that 1/10th of 1/5th of folks are child free not by choice. Say out of 50 people that math equals 1 person per 50 folks regret not being able to have kids.

          • @[email protected]
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            410 months ago

            No. Out of 50 that’s 40 who had kids, 9 who didn’t and regret it, and just 1 who didn’t and are content.

        • @[email protected]
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          210 months ago

          It’s a need in that it’s programmed into your biology, and most people can’t thrive without it.

          That’s not what survival need means.

          That leaves 49 in 50 that either have or wished, but couldn’t have, children.

          Again, this doesn’t make it a survival need.

    • @[email protected]
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      1110 months ago

      Survival need for species can be vastly different to that of individuals, like mantis’ sexual cannibalism.

      • @[email protected]
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        510 months ago

        Not exactly the best example, since that’s not a typical behavior but a result of poor scientific practices. Mantises only take that action when extremely stressed, which is frankly a lesson we should be carefully considering.

      • @[email protected]
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        410 months ago

        Or humans being able to live well past their ability to bear children. It might not make sense for an individual to live that long, but it’s better for a species, since it means that you have members that aren’t having their own kids, but are capable of helping care for them while the parents do other things.

    • Glitchington
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      310 months ago

      Survival? I’m just waiting to die. I can’t afford to live and the world just keeps getting worse. Oh, and the clusterfuck of conditions I’d be passing on? Not something worth cursing another human with.