Why?If you want to decouple value from work, I think you need to take the word income out of the name.
Oh yes, it's a hard sell because it'll be propunding a rational argument against a skewed, fake reality. First you have to take down the reality and, whatever crap many if not most pople in the US might say about bootstraps and being self-made and so on, what they aspire to is to achieve a disproportionate income for their effort (being corporate lawyers, company executives, that kind of thing).Oh, that's absolutely correct. But you're not going to get any leverage for UBI by saying "everyone should be allowed to work as little as rich people work, so let's take the rich people's money and give it to everybody." Again, I'm not engaging the logic of the rationale for UBI, just making my own prediction about how hard it's going to prove to sell it. Its proponents, I think, don't know what they're up against, what basically reflex-reactions of the Western mind presently are to certain ideas.
You do tend to do that.Then once you answer, I'll say another thing.
Why?
All I mean is in-come is not etymologically or logically related to either work or value. It's just resources that come-in to you. What matter how?
Then once you answer, I'll say another thing.
That's kind of a hocus pocus, though, because there is no mechanism by which wage received corresponds to labour input. And even if there was, modern work is so complex, so social, that it's impossible to assign a meaningful objective price value to most work. It's a market, with both worker and employer trying to get as much as they can for as little as they can. The idea that we still, in some indirect way, produce the means of our own subsistence is a moral story we tell about modern society, rather than a material description of how that society actually works. It's ideology, and given that most people in the United States did not participate in the nexus of wage-labour until well into the nineteenth century, it's necessarily recent ideology.That's all I mean. That's a thing, deeply embedded in the Western mind: in the sweat of thy brow shall thou eat thy bread. A lot of people are going to balk at just giving bread and not tying it to work. I'm not saying it can't be overcome. I'm just saying the proponents of UBI are going to have to find a sales strategy for overcoming this association. It's deeply embedded. The freethinkers on a site like this can cast if off as an outdated relic: to get it voted in as a national policy is going to be a lift.
It's just clear that:
[1] Americans don't like policy much
[2] Media will cover things in a non-policy way
[3] The occasional dogbone major media throws to policy is usually dumb and milqutoast
If neo-Nazis show up at a protest to support you, you should probably rethink what you are protesting.It doesn't matter if neo-Nazis were among those who showed up at the protest.
If neo-Nazis show up at a protest to support you, you should probably rethink what you are protesting.
Just a general principle to live by.
Did they disavow those Nazis, tell them to go away, express any disagreement?A majority of people want to keep the statues. Are they all neo-Nazis?
Ah-hum…he said there were fine people on both sides of the statue protest
I just saw his first ad accusing Trump of calling neo-Nazis at Charlottesville fine people, a majority of people opposed removing the statue of R.E.Lee. It doesn't matter if neo-Nazis were among those who showed up at the protest.
Did they disavow those Nazis, tell them to go away, express any disagreement?
Ah-hum…
They didn't just "show up." White supremacists organized the protest, bringing in neo-Nazis neo-facists, Klansmen, etc. to "unite the right." The government of Charlotte voted to remove the statue; the majority of Americans wanted the statue removed.
https://hyperallergic.com/397792/polls-americans-confederate-statues-removal/