View Single Post
  #2009  
Old 03-31-2017, 03:39 PM
maskedmelon maskedmelon is offline
Planar Protector

maskedmelon's Avatar

Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: not far from here
Posts: 5,793
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Lune [You must be logged in to view images. Log in or Register.]
No I'm saying giving them free money alone isn't enough to lift them out of poverty.
we agree again ^^ common ground!



Quote:
Wealth is a very large part. It meant living in a nice area, having other wealthy friends and the social regulation that goes with that, access to excellent schools and excellent education, and not having to sell my labor just to survive meant I could do whatever the fuck I wanted with my time, and at least some of it was self improvement. But like I said several times, the behavioral/genetic aspects were important too (nutrition, instilling value of hard work/education, reading before bed)
fair enough, I not entirely sure how we reconcile this difference. I believe those things that you listed at the end of that paragraph are significantly more important than wealth in ensuring you contribute meaningfully to society.


Quote:
That's one way to look at it and I don't think it tells the whole story. If you've ever been around military you know for every squared away recruit who takes advantage of his opportunities, there is a schmuck who spends his ~$20k/year on dirt bikes, corvettes, and alimony, and spends his G.I bill taking 8 years worth of classes in criminal justice before dropping out to work at the wal mart. My point is, there are a lot of people spring-boarded out of poverty who otherwise wouldn't have been, and a lot of that is because you've been provided opportunity.
exactly! ^^ we've already agreed that money alone will not lift people out of poverty, so what is left to account for difference? it could well be that a mix of money and retraining is necessary, or it could be that retraining is the solution. that aside, there are still those who are sufficiently deficient who not be helped by either.

Quote:
My dad does not have behavioral deficiencies from growing up in poverty, nor did we inherit any. What we did inherit is various mental illnesses that run in my family. I was able to live with them, my two brothers weren't.
I didn't mean to imply that your dad had behavioral deficiencies and thank you for not being offended. I would presume though that hereditable mental illnesses contributed to your family's poverty before your father and while your father did not directly suffer them and was able to overcome his circumstances as a result, he still carried them and passed them on to you and your brothers. That's my point. I think the same thing goes for culture and other behavioral tendencies too, which you seem to agree with at least in part.

Quote:
Even if you don't agree or understand why basic income fights poverty, it's worth it for no other reason than the other benefits:

1. When automation totally destroys the need for unskilled labor, it's going to save a lot of people from getting guillotined.
This is a good moral argument, but I see it as shortsighted because it only refers the problem. Unchecked, population of incapable individuals will continue to balloon and result in greatly increased future suffering when the bubble pops. That is why I feel compassion must be subservient to reason.

Quote:
2. It gives unskilled labor greater bargaining power to avoid slave-wages, destroying business models that rely on pricing out competitors by exploiting slave labor.
This is an interesting argument and I see the merit in it, but I would expect higher labor costs to result in further automation. Is that unreasonable? why isn't that a concern?



Quote:
Because

1. You're literally destroying the planet (and your nation), and if you can't see the negatives in that, you're morally bankrupt and there's no point explaining it in more detail.

i don't disagree that if you knowingly destroy the planet you are morally bankrupt, but I do not believe that nationalism and moral excelence go hand-in-hand.

Quote:
2. Climate science denial typically goes hand-in-hand with opposing environmental regulations, which means polluting the fuck out of everything in ways that are very harmful to your health. This is really the issue for me, because we're probably too late to fix the climate anyway, and probably incapable as species, but this directly affects your life and the life of your children/loved ones in a direct and measurable way. You are hurting your fellow countrymen for the short term economic benefit of energy enterprises. Fundamentally my issue is with people who are willing to destroy or poison the environment for economic gain, so my issue is with 99% of people.
This is a good argument and one i am on board with. while I remain dubious of the idea that the statistical significance of 200 years of climate data and extrapolation of 50,000 from that can be reliably used to make any meaningful assertion about a system that we expect to be around 4,500,000,000 years old and basing those assertions and dozens of modeled outcomes which together cover a very broad spectrum of change, i agree that it is unwise to pump poisons into our air and water and food. It is also unwise to exploit the environment to such extent that we suffer massive losses in biodiversity. The problem of course with all this is people. There are too many of us and those who are least capable of enacting meaningful change are most prolific (third world).

Quote:
3. As a matter of principle, it's an inability to accept facts and evidence, which I sometimes wish could be a capital offense.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Most people simply adopt the 'truths' fed gto them by their handlers and obfuscating dubious claims beneath the veil of science does not relieve them of their inherent witlessness. History is rife with false claims beneath the banner of science. skepticism is the canary in the coal mine^^

Quote:
There are countless children of poor people who you may think shouldn't have been allowed to be born because of their parents' financial situation, but end up being far better people than you or I.
i don't think that children should not be born because of their parents' financial situations. They may well end up being better people than you or me. However, the suffering most will endure along with that of their descendants, far outweighs the utility that could be generated by the few who rise to the highest of heights. there are also rich and average children who should not be born. it is not a matter of wealth. it is a matter of competence.

i am superior to many people in a few ways and wildly inferior in most. I am quite confident that does not award me any sort of net superiority, or I'd be working on cloning myself and propagating my genes as much as possible. To the contrary, I consider myself defective. I like myself very much, but I am not ideal. i am far from it.
__________________
<Millenial Snowfkake Utopia>