Basic Income is a fantasy through socialized theft, it sucks, the end. Or is it?

in #basic-income8 years ago (edited)

Is UBI, in any form or methodology, an automatic recipe for a dystopia? Is it always done through wrong-actions? Will it always fail no matter how it is done? Or is there merit in the idea to consider and develop it further?

I will talk about some of the objections to this idea, that I find laughable and without merit as valid objections.

@dantheman laid out a hypothetical thought experiment to explain a more viable method of Universal Basic Income that would not violate people's right to their property and allow for social programs to benefit those less able.

Some people think that UBI is impossible, and to even consider it, and "waste" time and space on the blockchain, or even worse "drain" the reward pool with "useless" material, is a bigger problem for them. Let alone, the audacity of a rich founder employee to dare think they could produce philosophical material for others to read and reward. Like... who does this guy think he is... posting content he wrote and getting rewarded for it by others... I determined it's not a good idea and doesn't deserve anything!

Seriously though... get a grip people...

For the issue of UBI being impossible as a working viable solution in the long term, I agree, I've even said so in a previous post, but with the caveat that it would need to be voluntary to succeed, otherwise I didn't see it working. @dantheman has laid out an idea for how this could be done without actually taking from anyone, given that we would all live in an automated world where people's labor is not being taken from. Hence, it would be voluntary, because you wouldn't have created anything, and you don't lose anything that way either, so nothing is being taken from you.

And even before the automation, we could start it off in a controversial way, as he recently laid out.

I think some objections are based on the whole redistribution of land aspect that people don't like. They aren't honestly evaluating the progressing of land grabbing, theft and power it held in society to arrive at where we are now, with an inability to live freely on this planet from land what was there before anyone got here. Some people played games of death-dealing and war and took it all over for power and control over others. There has never been a reset to put things right. People have a lot to lose in a reset.

I think a lot of the objections come from blind associations with anything that has its roots in socialism or appears socialist. Rethinking a concept and methodology for how to make it come about is not a welcome task for some people. Their reading and thinking gets all cloudy on these emotional subjects.

So don't think about this change right now. We are talking about ideas of the possible or likely future to come, i.e. of robotics and automation, and how that will affect our employment. Hence, the UBI as part of the discussion when that likely future eventually comes about.

I used to be really against UBI, automation and AI. Not as much anymore. There is great potential for misuse and problems from these tools. But that's the thing, they are tools. If the creators (humans) make the tools right, then its ok. If the tools are made wrong, then we can have big problems on our hands. The problem is how we create the tools, not the idea of the tools.

Does that mean there are no other problems? Of course not. People can be lazy, exploit a system/tool, and maybe we can think of workarounds and fixes to problems before they happen, and maybe we can implement this type of change before automation comes if we do it via an investment route, who knows. @inertia has a post on that investment angle which is good.

Many programs/tools we have now were not created properly, designed poorly, don't work, cause additional problems, or make things worse. The original idea might be valid, but the methodology of implementing it was not.

There are problems some people want to pick at, and use a huge lock of denial to attempt to invalidate the idea from being honestly discussed or resolving the problems it initially has. They want to project what people have done, into the future and say a new model won't work because the way people work in the old model won't work in the new model. LOL.

Does anyone see the fallacy? How can you expect people who have been conditioned to live in the conditions of an old model, to automatically fit into the mold of a new model? The whole reason it's called a new model is because it's a new model and different, contrasts, and possibly contradicts much of what the old model was about.

So someone has an idea of how people are now, and project them into a new way of life and look at how it will conflict with their conditioned way of living. I have news for you, people can change.

And for the objections that there will be people who won't do what we "expect" them to do, and pull their own weight and contribute their fair share to society and progress, etc. or whatever, well I have more news for you: we already have that.

People exploit the welfare now, and the system now, and so many things now, but the difference is that right now our current condition has much falsity and the welfare income is from the theft of taxation of other people's labor/property. If you have a UBI, and other systems, based on voluntary investment to be profitable, not a sinkhole, then it will succeed based on making it succeed as at a profit or at least not a loss.

For now or in the future, we will always have potential problems from people who don't fit in or do what we expect, or how a better way of living "won't work" because people do X, Y, Z, and apparently we are like stone and are not capable of changing our ways... LMAO. Some people really don't want to look at porposed solutions and find the problems in them to resolve them. They just want to find the problems with that proposed solution, and use them to deny any further development of that solution.

Please understand this about any society:

All societies are constructs of the individuals within them. The quality of the functionality of a methodology for living is maintained by the individuals who accept or reject it. The degree of acceptance of a methodology within a society varies based on how aligned the methodology for living is with principles of truth, right, good and morality. Society, reflecting the individuals, is to be in harmony with not violating other's lives and what they produced/created with their bodies. The members of that society get along better, and can truly unite and trust each other. At their core level of being they reach a common-page level of moral understanding and cooperate to ever increasing levels of potential.

Methodologies that have less congruence, alignment and harmony with what is right, good, true and moral as a way of living, are less likely to perpetuate in the long term. They inherently go against our core being and desires for cooperation, integration and unity based on common values, respect and non-harm. Don't do to other what you don't want them to do to you. Non-harm, an apophatic approach of what not to do. So we treat others as ourselves in some respect, bridging a seemingly polarized self and others, or individual and collective, into a relatively "harmonious" reciprocal "balance".

Fluctuations, upheavals, and turbulence will occur. Conflicts, friction, interference. These can be resolved, whether its about what to do in done in real life, or as a hypothetical ideal future to envision and try to create as a new model contrasting the current/old model.

Yes, there are still those "strays" to "worry" about. Life and freedom requires eternal vigilance. We alway have to be prepared or face the consequences of free will that can create actions of evil as well as good.

We can't control other individuals to get on the same page of living. Society is a reflection of individuals, but individuals are conditioned and reflect society as well. It's a feedback loop. To create the new model, the best we can do is all change individually to a new way of living, influence others to do the same, and society will automatically reflect that new change as the aggregate populace in a society aligns with that new way. As the new rises, the old falls.

Utopia? Why does it have to be that way? Can't it just be about the idea and how good/bad it is in all respects. Aren't you just scoffing and ignoring the idea on it's own merits by whitewashing it as a "utopia" in a pejorative sense? Maybe you also scoff and mock the idea of peace and how that's impossible, so don't even bother trying to make a more peaceful world... absolute perfection is not possible so don't try to improve yourself... LOL.

If your main objections are always how it won't work for "everyone", or how someone can do "X", or "Y" in that system that isn't good... Well people have the freedom to do anything that is evil, like murder, in any damn system apart from total control, but that's not a valid argument to the validity of a system to be based on the almost infinite potential actions a human can take.

You don't compensate for potential evil actions by creating a more evil system of fear that tries to control people to prevent actions from happening. You look to create a better way of living, and deal with the continuation of immoral people (yes, more "problems" with the solution) who don't adopt more morality into their lives. You educate people on the value, virtue and purpose of being more moral. How that benefits themselves and others as well, and benefits them more so than if they only considered themselves.

Again, it's integrating self with others, individual with collective, selfish with altruistic, while not losing yourself, the individual and your needs, to be subsumed by the mass of the collective. This will create a better way of living for everyone while we all respect the moral rights of each other. If we stick to not violating others life and bodily productions, then the other problems are minor and we can resolve them relatively easily by comparison.


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[References: 1, 2, 3, 4]


@krnel
2016-11-13, 2:20pm

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My thought is that for something like this to work, the idea of income needs to be erased from the equation. Rather, a concept of basic supply would make more sense.
An example would be allotments of produce, meat, dairy and other assorted items necessary for survival. These could be bartered between individuals, but the basic nutrient value and mass would be consistent for everyone.
By removing the income aspect of it, the competition and socialist concerns are diminished. All a person needs to do in order to survive is to show up to receive their allotment. If someone has more than enough, they don't show up for more or they donate, sell or barter their allotment.
The land part is more challenging. It's one thing to point at how land has been regulated out of the hands of the people (allodial title is almost non-existent in the world today, in favor of feudal entitlement). Even large portions of what once was private property have been appropriated by bureaucrats on the controlling end of a gun.
But other families have been able to maintain their land well and have worked it for generations. It is their contribution, means and source.
Assumption of land stolen by the state for redistribution to the populace makes sense. Assumption of land owned by individuals is another. IMO, there's no equitable way to accomplish the latter.
Thus, the market is not affected in any way, other than basic necessities see a reduction in demand.

Yup, that's another way to do it like RBE. Money is just easier to facilitate exchanges, but an ID card would also apply. I see issues of restriction and control, but I've though about it as well.

My initial idea a few years ago for a better future was based without automation, and how we maximize our free time if we work together to get the basics down for everyone: cooperative 1h/week farm work, water work, shelter work, or other work, collectively producing abundance, and leaving the rest of the time each week to go pursue any other higher goals than survival. The laziness factor was always something bothersome, which I resolved through social pressure, tension, conflict, shunning, ostracism and expulsion from the community if a free loader keeps being a free loader.

One thing is for sure, whatever direction we go in, we need to be on the same page. Something Steemit is showing it lacks, and needs to develop. I am all for Ned and Dan, and Steemit Inc keeping their SP holdings for years to come to prevent a chaotic, false anarchistic, democratic, free for all mob rule, if they lose control of leading Steemit in a direction. Imagine if there was no founders or leaders, Steemit would be forking left and right with people pulling & pushing in different directions. It would collapse in short time. Steemit is an experiment, and I'm glad to have the founders leading the direction for where we go. They have the vision, they created the platform. Other people don't get their vision, and want to go in another direction, taking Steemit along with them...

It's a tough exercise for me. The idea of creating an environment where everyone is provided for is appealing to me for many obvious reasons. For one, it would free people to pursue methods of production without the pressure of making sure that production puts food on the table. But it also negates the poverty that results in death and disease, which is really something that would be nice to resolve. As long as warmongers pull the string, this concept likely won't be realized except maybe in a coercive fashion.
OTOH, a worker is worthy of his wages. Folks that excel should enjoy the fruit of their labor. Those who don't or are sloths, shouldn't ride on their coattails without their blessing.
Ideally, this could manifest without rulers. Relying on the benevolence of those with the most power always leads to tyranny, eventually. But even anarchy needs boundaries.

or perhaps ownersip, where every individual is granted the ownership of some form of property that he/she can do what they want with to ncreate more harmonious living. A next level of social housing.

I think the best model yet is that of the Venus project.

Which promotes a "sharing" economy.

which basically means that is something is needed to be accessed, it is made accesable

https://www.thevenusproject.com/

"People don't have ideas; ideas have people' Explains why people uphold the old paradigms which are proven nonsense. Especially ones which uphold dehumanizing conditions.

interesting concept

it's Jungian. Based on how beliefs take on a life of their own through collective unconscious and other psychocultural means and memes.

Excellent post! Thank you for linking me to it. We all, as a species, need to expand our minds a bit and think a little more like the quantum computers that my some day replace us. It's not all binary, on or off, black or white, yes or no. Some complex problems require complex thinking and complex solutions. We have to rise up to think about and talk intelligently about these ideas. Well done!

So far, no one could tell me two things about UBI:
There are jobs, nobody will do voluntarily. And this should better not change. If you leave bureaucratic jobs to people that actually LIKE to pester others by imposing their schemes on them... oops.
Likewise with tasks relating to law&order. Do you really want to filter out all those who the jobs without being particularly fond of it? That will leave some of the most il-mooded people - if anybody - to the task.

The other topic is migration. People from all over the world will be keen to live in such a system. Migration pressure on such a country would be immense. Either you completely and rigorously lock down the borders or you accept illegal immigration and just do not give them the UBI. Which by definition means that there is no UBI.

Migration:

  1. An UBI would only be given to state citizens obviously.
  2. Also when every state has UBI (which is actually cheaper for poor countries and way more effective there), the migration will surely be lower then under the current wars, economical destruction by the West and climatic destruction caused by the west.

Jobs: You make the basic wrong assumption that under UBI nobody would work for money. But that is not true. Most would still do it. The only thing that will change are the amounts you get for some jobs. Maybe cleaning will be a high paid job (so most people decide to do it themselves).

And why do you think

with tasks relating to law&order. Do you really want to filter out all those who the jobs without being particularly fond of it

?? It will acutally be the the other way round, people are way more likely to do what they want, and there are a lot of people who want to do police or doctor not because of money but because they want to help.
Also dont forget that a huge part of crime has its roots in poverty. UBI will decrease that dramatically.

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