The Democratic Candidates
Comments
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mcgruff10 said:Meltdown99 said:mcgruff10 said:Lerxst1992 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:
Nazi Germany was also highly technically advanced.
While Sweden vocally opposed your actions in Vietnam and propelled society forward for its people. Like most of the rest of the developed world also did.
Mrussel invaded vietnam??
Looking to close down another topic Chaos? We are now comparing moderate Democrats to Nazis?
Maybe trump can buy Sweden after Greenland. Then you'll have what you deserve :-)Give Peas A Chance…0 -
Kat said:TOPIC:
The Democratic Candidates
Give Peas A Chance…0 -
What's the downside of Steyer?
I'd like to see Pete get aggressive and debate with passion and fury. That will be necessary in the general.0 -
Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?
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fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?0
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mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?
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fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?0
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mrussel1 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?saw this article in another tread here.
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fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?saw this article in another tread here.
It's an interesting idea but how to pay for it is huge. If there were a way to come up with an "automation tax" (for example employers that replace employees with AI developed from govt resources) you MIGHT be able to convince the electorate.
But right now, the poll you cited gets trump 4 mo years:
"46% say they would be willing to pay higher personal taxes to fund the program and 54% say they would not be."
And if we dig deeper, those who oppose UBI (older ppl) are more likely to vote than those who support the idea.0 -
Lerxst1992 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?saw this article in another tread here.
It's an interesting idea but how to pay for it is huge. If there were a way to come up with an "automation tax" (for example employers that replace employees with AI developed from govt resources) you MIGHT be able to convince the electorate.
But right now, the poll you cited gets trump 4 mo years:
"46% say they would be willing to pay higher personal taxes to fund the program and 54% say they would not be."
And if we dig deeper, those who oppose UBI (older ppl) are more likely to vote than those who support the idea.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/thehill.com/hilltv/what-americas-thinking/435278-poll-most-voters-oppose-a-universal-basic-income-programs?amp
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mrussel1 said:Lerxst1992 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?saw this article in another tread here.
It's an interesting idea but how to pay for it is huge. If there were a way to come up with an "automation tax" (for example employers that replace employees with AI developed from govt resources) you MIGHT be able to convince the electorate.
But right now, the poll you cited gets trump 4 mo years:
"46% say they would be willing to pay higher personal taxes to fund the program and 54% say they would not be."
And if we dig deeper, those who oppose UBI (older ppl) are more likely to vote than those who support the idea.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/thehill.com/hilltv/what-americas-thinking/435278-poll-most-voters-oppose-a-universal-basic-income-programs?amp
That looks like 57% oppose. My best guess is it would be at least 60/40 against during a general election when we would have trump and the GOP screaming "See we told you they are Socialists!"
The progressive wing of the Dem party is having a difficult time understanding how US politics works.
Leftist policies that change the fabric of America need at least a vocal 60% of everyone to get going.
Bernie and Liz have support of maybe 35% of dems and a lower % of independents. That is nowhere close to the support needed to make it happen.
Its shocking that Bernie and Liz are mostly to blame for this lack of understanding0 -
UBI is too radical for america. think of the ideals that country holds so dear. given it a generation or two and that may change, depending on how politics goes. but right now, not a chance.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0
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Lerxst1992 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?saw this article in another tread here.
It's an interesting idea but how to pay for it is huge. If there were a way to come up with an "automation tax" (for example employers that replace employees with AI developed from govt resources) you MIGHT be able to convince the electorate.
But right now, the poll you cited gets trump 4 mo years:
"46% say they would be willing to pay higher personal taxes to fund the program and 54% say they would not be."
And if we dig deeper, those who oppose UBI (older ppl) are more likely to vote than those who support the idea.my question is this. if you do believe that AI and automation is going to cause a major shift in employment with less people working, how to you solve this problem? cause if you don't you may end up with a trump also.I would be interested to see how the idea of UBI played out in the battle states as compared to national.0 -
UBI was tried on a very limited scale in Ontario and Finland...both jurisdictions ended the program early. They were not seeing the results they had hoped for. I in no way support a UBI. And the only way I'd get behind a UBI is if it replaced all the other social programs that people depend on...welfare, unemployment insurance, pension...etc. I could get behind one or the other but not all because all those other departments will need to be eliminated in order to even attempt such a move.Give Peas A Chance…0
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fife said:Lerxst1992 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?saw this article in another tread here.
It's an interesting idea but how to pay for it is huge. If there were a way to come up with an "automation tax" (for example employers that replace employees with AI developed from govt resources) you MIGHT be able to convince the electorate.
But right now, the poll you cited gets trump 4 mo years:
"46% say they would be willing to pay higher personal taxes to fund the program and 54% say they would not be."
And if we dig deeper, those who oppose UBI (older ppl) are more likely to vote than those who support the idea.my question is this. if you do believe that AI and automation is going to cause a major shift in employment with less people working, how to you solve this problem? cause if you don't you may end up with a trump also.I would be interested to see how the idea of UBI played out in the battle states as compared to national.
I think you are onto something- that UBI might be a reasonable solution to automation- but the US is one of the more conservative nations around.
AI was a bigger problem than immigrants stealing jobs IMO and it was barely discussed the last election.
We are now 5 years into the Trump revolution and I think he has cemented opinion for many in swing states blaming immigrants for this employment issue.
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Meltdown99 said:UBI was tried on a very limited scale in Ontario and Finland...both jurisdictions ended the program early. They were not seeing the results they had hoped for. I in no way support a UBI. And the only way I'd get behind a UBI is if it replaced all the other social programs that people depend on...welfare, unemployment insurance, pension...etc. I could get behind one or the other but not all because all those other departments will need to be eliminated in order to even attempt such a move.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0
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oftenreading said:Meltdown99 said:UBI was tried on a very limited scale in Ontario and Finland...both jurisdictions ended the program early. They were not seeing the results they had hoped for. I in no way support a UBI. And the only way I'd get behind a UBI is if it replaced all the other social programs that people depend on...welfare, unemployment insurance, pension...etc. I could get behind one or the other but not all because all those other departments will need to be eliminated in order to even attempt such a move.Give Peas A Chance…0
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Meltdown99 said:oftenreading said:Meltdown99 said:UBI was tried on a very limited scale in Ontario and Finland...both jurisdictions ended the program early. They were not seeing the results they had hoped for. I in no way support a UBI. And the only way I'd get behind a UBI is if it replaced all the other social programs that people depend on...welfare, unemployment insurance, pension...etc. I could get behind one or the other but not all because all those other departments will need to be eliminated in order to even attempt such a move.
It was a pilot project than ran in three locations. If you don't live in one of those three locations, then not surprising that no one from your area got included. If you do, then again, it was a pilot project, never meant to include everyone.
"Some people got UBI who owned businesses" - the eligibility criteria included those who were employed but earned income below the defined basic income level. Many people who own small businesses don't earn enough to survive on, at least initially, but the goal was to help people get there. People were encouraged to go back to school or work while in the program, since that only benefits them and society as a whole. Employment income would be clawed back at 50%, so there was still incentive to work.
"Help people most in need" - inclusion criteria were different than basic social assistance, since this is a different program.
The program was cancelled by the new Ford government after only one year of a three year project, and thus no usable data was achieved. You have no idea whether "the results were never going to be there"; that's just your opinion of it, based on no data.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
For the record, Yang's proposal is not about helping people in need. Every citizen would receive the amount regardless of income. It's intentionally creating a welfare state. No thanks.0
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Lerxst1992 said:fife said:Lerxst1992 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:mrussel1 said:fife said:Just a question, I am trying to get more information on some the candidates and I have a friend who is a big fan of Andrew Yang. Seems very smart but not getting alot of traction. just trying to understand why?saw this article in another tread here.
It's an interesting idea but how to pay for it is huge. If there were a way to come up with an "automation tax" (for example employers that replace employees with AI developed from govt resources) you MIGHT be able to convince the electorate.
But right now, the poll you cited gets trump 4 mo years:
"46% say they would be willing to pay higher personal taxes to fund the program and 54% say they would not be."
And if we dig deeper, those who oppose UBI (older ppl) are more likely to vote than those who support the idea.my question is this. if you do believe that AI and automation is going to cause a major shift in employment with less people working, how to you solve this problem? cause if you don't you may end up with a trump also.I would be interested to see how the idea of UBI played out in the battle states as compared to national.
I think you are onto something- that UBI might be a reasonable solution to automation- but the US is one of the more conservative nations around.
AI was a bigger problem than immigrants stealing jobs IMO and it was barely discussed the last election.
We are now 5 years into the Trump revolution and I think he has cemented opinion for many in swing states blaming immigrants for this employment issue.
One thing that's preventing automation of manual labourers for now is probably the steep cost of robotics automations compared to software automations, and also the fact that if you're to replace an entire role with automatons, that's typically a decent number of tasks all of which would have to be automated (or distributed to remaining employees) at a cost. I think these two realities might buy us a few years more during which we can continue to ignore the warning signs of impending economic havoc (alongside the impending climate catastrophe and nuclear conflict).
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