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The Universal basic income or UBI is an ambitious social program which has been gaining traction
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over the last few years.
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Thanks in large part to this man.
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Andrew Yang.
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He is running for US president though his chances of becoming the democratic nominee
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are low because of his low ratings.
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Nevertheless, he has proven popular on the internet and especially on the new left if
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you want to call it that.
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That's because of his proposal of what he calls a freedom dividend.
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It's essentially a UBI.
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But what's that?
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And why does my title imply that I don't like it?
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We'll get to that.
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Let's first go over the basics.
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A UBI would be a set amount of money given to people unconditionally.
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For now, we will use Andrew Yang's plan because the specifics like who get's the
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money and how much can vary.
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Yang's plan is to give every American citizen over the age of 18 1000$ a month.
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Yang doesn't advertise this a lot in public but that would probably replace some social
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security like unemployment benefits and some healthcare stuff his website mentions something
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like that.
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It would probably also remove the need for all of the bureaucrats whose job it is to
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bully unemployed people into getting a job.
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There are many advantages to giving out money to EVERYONE rather than just to unemployed
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people.
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One of them is that with usual unemployment benefits you may just loose all of them if
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you find a job.
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Here is an example of someone I know.
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She get's 500€ a month in unemployment benefits and she is searching for a job.
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She found a part time job where she get's 550€ for working 20 hours a week.
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Would you take that deal?
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She didn't.
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And before you judge her keep an in mind, she didn't not take the job because she
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doesn't want to work but because she wanted a full time job in the first place and because
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20 hours a week aren't worth 50€ a month.
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She isn't lazy she is being rational.
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But with a UBI she would always get those 1000$ and even if she got a job, even a part
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time one, she would get to keep all of that money.
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Work is always rewarded.
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This is one of the upsides, another one is the fact that those who have stable jobs could
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work fewer hours and still have the same income.
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Or they could work the same amount of time and get a higher standard of living.
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It would also allow a sort of payment for socially necessary work which is currently
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not paid like housework and reproductive labour.
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Finally, families could afford to live with one primary bread giver….
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again, I guess.
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But this time let's not do it in a really sexist way?
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I guess?
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Alternatively both parents could just working part time.
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Now you may wonder who is going to pay for all that and the answer isn't necessarily
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easy but it's not as unimaginable as it may seem.
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Yang has a whole section of his website dedicated to how he is going to pay for it and it's
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not really relevant to my point, so I'll just assume it all works out and it will work
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out forever even through all natural and economic crisis, inflation and all the other things
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that could prevent the US government from continuing it.
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So then why then does my title imply that I dislike it?
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You may or may not have noticed that I am a bit of a socialist and I like helping the
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working class.
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And it really seems like a UBI would be great for the working people doesn't it?
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And in the past, I used to like the idea of a UBI.
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Hell, there even used to be a video of me defending the UBI on this channel but looking
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a bit closer I changed my mind on it.
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Now don't get me wrong.
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I am not one of those people who want to oppose helping the working class to get them angry
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enough to start a revolution.
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I think that that's a horrible idea and I think we should do everything we can to
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help the people which is why I also support minimum wages and universal healthcare.
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But I am still a little hesitant on the UBI.
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Let's look at why Yang is proposing it in the first place shall we?
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Luckily his website explains it to us.
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Essentially automation will make most people unemployed through no fault of their own and
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we somehow need to keep people alive even if they can't work.
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The video “Humans need not apply” by CGP Grey from a few years back sums that up pretty
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good.
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So, the goal of Yang is not to improve the conditions of the people now but to secure
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a future for everyone.
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Seems good enough.
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Looks like a noble goal.
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And as I mentioned before.
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I used to like the UBI as well.
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To me it seemed like the only way a future could be secured once most can't get work
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anymore.
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It was also sort of a socialist dream.
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Work becoming entirely optional.
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The people no longer being slaves to the economy.
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It sounds great!
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But now let's approach this differently.
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Let's not look at it in terms of up and downsides and in terms of policy proposals.
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Let's do a Marxist analysis of the Universal basic income.
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Let's set the stage.
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We live in a neoliberal capitalist society.
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We have our two capitalist classes.
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Bourgeoisie, that's cpaitalists and Proletariat who are the workers.
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The Bourgeoisie are the people who make money by owning things.
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They are our landlords, factory owners and major shareholders, people like that.
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They profit by owning.
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And on the other side we have the Proletariat.
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The people who need to work in order to survive because they don't own enough stuff to live
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of their passive income alone.
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Those 2 classes have different interests like for example a landlord wants high property
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values so they can make lots of money and the tenant wants low property values to be
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able to pay the rent and still have some money left for other things.
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The state is a tool of the ruling class.
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This means that the class in power uses the state to help them in the class war.
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For example, by setting a minimum wage or by cutting taxes on the 1% depending on who
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is in power.
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Right now, we live in neoliberal states and they are very much on the side of capital.
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For example, the state provides education for the people and roads, so the Bourgeoisie
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has good infrastructure and an educated workforce.
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This makes business easier and profits higher.
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Of course, countries also compete for businesses via offering them tax breaks or similar.
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This is why apple pays only half a percent in tax.
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It's because the states aim to please the capitalists in hopes that their wealth will
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trickle down.
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The state very much serves the economy over the people right now.
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In their defense most politicians probably genuinely believe that their support of the
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economy helps the people.
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As the Austrian Economic Chambers put it after the re-introduced the 12-hour workday: “If
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the economy is well, everyone is well”.
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Of course 90% of people hated having to work even more and it has undoubtedly made many
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people a lot less well but whatever.
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Now where does the UBI fit into this Marxist view of society?
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Is it a tool of the working class used against the capitalist class?
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Not really.
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As I mentioned before the class currently in power is the capitalist class.
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Andrew Yang himself is an entrepreneur and a major capitalist.
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This doesn't mean everything he does it bad, that's not how the world works, but
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it means we should question his motives twice.
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So, for some reason the capitalist class is in favor of this policy.
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Why is that?
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Well he told us.
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Because automation will make most working people unemployed.
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And maybe Yang cares about this because he is a genuinely good person, but we should
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also keep in mind that while the Bourgeoisie exploits the working class it also needs the
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working class to consume the products they sell.
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Capitalists own factories and exploit workers in them to create things which they then sell
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to the very working people that produced them.
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If all the workers where replaced with machines, then nobody be able to buy the products from
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the Bourgeoisie.
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That worries the capitalists.
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Not to mention that a lot of hungry unemployed people might get the idea to take this whole
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class warfare thing a little more seriously than we do today.
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So, what to do?
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How can the capitalist class keep the workers pacified and able to pay the Bourgeoisie?
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With a UBI.
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So from a Marxist perspective a UBI would be little more than the Bourgeoisie putting
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the Proletariat on life support.
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Giving them just enough money to avoid revolution and enough to continue to purchase products
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and keep the profit flowing.
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Essentially this is another example of the ruling class using the state for its profit.
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The state would basically gift the capitalists a big population with money whom they can
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sell their products to.
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A UBI would be the next costly thing the state would to do serve the economy.
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So maybe in the future we would then have 90% of the population being unemployed, dependant
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on the state for their survival while the 1% owns all of the machines which hold more
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productive power than our modern economy does with only a fraction of the workers.
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The UBI may seem like a good thing for the people but in reality, it's just another
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hotfix for capitalism.
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Let me suggest an alternative.
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The reason we need a UBI in the first place is because most would be unemployed while
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a few would own the machines that produce everything.
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But what if we changed the way the economy was run?
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What if we said that things produced by a machine belong to everyone?
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Not just the person who owns the machine.
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Everyone.
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Collective ownership.
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This way we wouldn't need a UBI.
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Everyone would get what they need.
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And we wouldn't have to worry about 90% of the people being poor while the 1% continues
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to profit of machines.
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There would still be jobs for those who want them but work itself may not be necessary
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anymore.
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It would be a fully automated economy, build by everyone serving everyone.
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But right now, we aren't going there.
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Right now, we are sliding towards a future where a few people will own everything that
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is produced by machines.
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A world in which technological advancement allows a few people not to work by getting
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everything the machines produce while everyone else is barely able to survive on government
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money.
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And if we get a UBI we may very well end up like that.
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It is a great idea and I admire that people are so forward thinking.
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But the UBI will not save us from a bad future.
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To save us from a bad future what we need to do is change the way we see ownership.
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Why should the product of a fully automated factory forever belong to the person who once
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paid for it?
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Or their children or grandchildren?
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Why not give it to everyone?
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The universal basic income is very much a neoliberal solution to a capitalist problem.
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The profit drive of capitalism makes most workers unemployed and if you can't imagine
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anything but capitalism your solution will probably not be making useful systemic changes
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but relying on the government to fix the problem just as neoliberalism always does it.
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But at some point we may have to consider that adding band aids to capitalism may no
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longer be feasible.
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Maybe it's time to look at change.
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So, in conclusion: Should we support a UBI?
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*sigh* I don't know.
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It is certainly a good step and it would help countless people, but the problem is that
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we may slide into a world where the means of production are fully automated and in the
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hands of the Bourgeoisie while the remains of the proletariat would be dependant on the
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government for survival.
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I guess we can say that the UBI should not be our goal.
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Our goal should be a world in which products of automation belong to everyone and not just
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one person.
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And that way we wouldn't need a UBI.
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But in the meantime?
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Should we support it?
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I don't know.
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I am genuinely not sure so I will leave that decision to you.
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Feel free to tell me your conclusion and your reasons in the comments.
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And whily you are scrolled down there leave a like and sub as well.
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Oh, and join the discord.
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Until the next time c ya.