New UBI Program Launches In Canada To 'Define Our Future' (thestar.com) 300
As automation continues to replace human workers, a universal basic income program will begin paying $1,689 per month to select Ontario residents later this year, as Canada joins other countries testing a UBI (which include America, Scotland, the Netherlands, Finland, India, Rwanda, Kenya and Uganda). An anonymous reader quotes the Toronto Star:
Public support in Ontario for the province's three-year UBI project to be launched this spring in three Ontario communities is remarkably strong. The 35,000 Ontarians canvassed by Queen's Park for their input were near-unanimous in supporting the UBI projects. And they insisted that a UBI augment, rather than replace, existing welfare, medical and other social supports...
A well-designed UBI equates to freedom. Freedom from exploitative employers. Freedom to launch a small business or develop an invention despite a lack of employment income. Liberation from the "poverty trap," where taking a paying job means surrendering welfare and other benefits... Fact is, job scarcity in traditional vocations is acute, worsening and permanent. In 2013, two Oxford professors forecast that about 45 per cent of U.S. jobs could be eliminated by automation within the next 20 years. And a more recent report by researchers at Indiana's Ball State University found that 88 per cent of U.S. job loss has been caused by automation, not globalization.
Interestingly, the U.S. launched a Universal Basic Income pilot program which ran for three years starting in 1968. It was run by 36-year-old Donald Rumsfeld (who would later become Secretary of Defense) working with special assistant Dick Cheney (who went on to become America's vice president from 2001-2009). U.S. representatives even voted to replace welfare with a UBI, but the measure ultimately failed in the Senate.
A well-designed UBI equates to freedom. Freedom from exploitative employers. Freedom to launch a small business or develop an invention despite a lack of employment income. Liberation from the "poverty trap," where taking a paying job means surrendering welfare and other benefits... Fact is, job scarcity in traditional vocations is acute, worsening and permanent. In 2013, two Oxford professors forecast that about 45 per cent of U.S. jobs could be eliminated by automation within the next 20 years. And a more recent report by researchers at Indiana's Ball State University found that 88 per cent of U.S. job loss has been caused by automation, not globalization.
Interestingly, the U.S. launched a Universal Basic Income pilot program which ran for three years starting in 1968. It was run by 36-year-old Donald Rumsfeld (who would later become Secretary of Defense) working with special assistant Dick Cheney (who went on to become America's vice president from 2001-2009). U.S. representatives even voted to replace welfare with a UBI, but the measure ultimately failed in the Senate.
Legalised Marijuana and UBI (Score:2)
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nope, for quite a while, we have been a testing ground for the US.
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This isn't really a big thing. Legalized marijuana isn't likely going to happen, and that's the realm of federal government. And the Trudeau government keeps pushing it back, then changing their mind, then walking away from it and so on. Likely nothing will happen despite I believe the 4th or 5th time in the last year and half they've promised something on it.
The UBI test program is the realm of the province of Ontario, and is only being tested in one area. That one area is in the asshole of nowhere, th
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It's already de facto legal in many areas. At one rally, a guy toking a joint went up to a cop and said "Aren't you going to arrest me?" The cop said, "Why? Nobody's filed a complaint."
Either legalize it and control it, or ban tobacco as well. Now, I'd prefer the latter (because it all stinks like shit) but banning only one of the two is hypocritical.
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It's not legal in Canada, small amounts are "decriminalized" still illegal, but you won't go to jail -- if you're charged you'll be fined. Canada only has one set of laws regarding federal crimes, which is what drug laws fall into. We don't have the patchwork system where states(provinces), have their own felonies(indictable offences). Provinces have either summery conviction(misdemeanors) or standard infractions. If you go from Ontario to British Columbia, the crime of possession is the same in both pr
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I've gotten northern living allowance, it isn't anything like $1000/mo. It was a couple Grand extra on my taxes at the end of the year, if I travelled and had receipts.
If you're getting it on your taxes, it's not northern living allowance. That's the northern living offset. Northern living allowances are a stipend to offset remote communities and costs.
So yeah, good job on me getting it right.
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It's not universal if it's not for everyone (Score:5, Insightful)
UBI is always defined as "everyone gets money, no questions asked". It is, in fact, the main selling point: apparently we spend more money on civil servants to figure out who is supposed to receive any money, than that we would spend just giving money to everyone, ridiculous as that may sound.
If you then go and look at all those programs, you quickly find that they are not for everyone at all: these are programs for small numbers of people, people who were preselected by the government because they are already in social programs anyway. There is nothing universal about any of this; these people are already on benefits as is, and the only thing that is changing is that society is making even less demands on their precious time. For example, the people in this program in the Netherlands will not have to apply for jobs anymore - i.e. they won't have to make any effort to stand on their own two legs again anymore, the rest of us will pay for them for life.
Whether this is an enlightened policy, or if society is simply writing off the most problematic people in a humane way, I'll leave for you to decide... But at any rate, it has nothing to do with a _universal_ basic income.
Oh, and the rest of us weren't asked whether we actually want to pay for the upkeep of these people. Personally I don't mind supporting people who are temporarily in a bad situation, or who through circumstances outside their own control cannot get a job. But should we also be supporting people who are certainly capable of working, yet choose not to? Should we, as a society, have families around where being unemployed and on benefits is a lifestyle choice going back three generations? I say we build some container villages. Give them a central kitchen, let them have food and shelter, and no more. If they want any luxury beyond this, let them go out and work for it, like the rest of us.
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Almost as if it was a pilot program. Crazy. Isn't it?
Re:It's not universal if it's not for everyone (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, that is crazy, and I'll tell you why. We already have social security, and that money is already being paid to those people. So what makes UBI different? Well, it mostly appears to be two things: the fact that it is universal, and that no demands are being made on participants. So we test that, and our test parameters will be as follows:
1. It is not universal.
2. The demand being made on participants is that they already qualify for social security benefits.
So what, exactly, are we testing here? What the new name looks like? Because that is all it is.
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Not all UBI programs are created equal. UBI is taxable income, and as your income increases, more is clawed back in income tax. Also, test programs like the one in Canada in the '70s reduced UBI payments by 50 cents for every dollar of earned income, so that if someone earned twice the basic UBI payment, they were no longer collecting UBI. The "Universal" was that the program was open to everyone, not that everyone would automatically receive it - just those who needed it as a form of "top-up" for deficient
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UBI is a good idea for the reasons its proponents state: increased automation, and a disappearing job base. But making it a government program makes it undisguised socialism - particularly the way you've spelt it out. If taxes are gonna be increased to pay for it, it'll be like Obamacare: more and more people are gonna drop out of the tax pool and try and be UBI recipients, which will make the whole thing collapse of its own weight.
Better idea is to, ironically, automate the UBI program: have people
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What is it about people who have never experienced socialism claiming that it is so bad? Most of the G8 has socialized medicine and their citizens wouldn't have it any other way. And yet people in the united states would rather pay insurance companies money to deny them medical care - more money per capita to cover a smaller portion of the population than any of the G8 spend on universal coverage?
Do you pay a toll each time you walk on the sidewalk? You would if it were owned by a for-profit corporation. S
"I love the USSR Glove. It's so bad." (Score:2)
What is it about people who have never experienced socialism claiming that it is so bad?
Because people have experienced socialism, and it was so bad.* See roman_mir's comment [slashdot.org] about experiences with similar programs in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
more money per capita to cover a smaller portion of the population than any of the G8 spend on universal coverage
Opponents of socialized medicine would counter that some new drugs are made available in countries with socialized medicine years later than in the United States because the single payer in those countries isn't willing to pay as much per month's supply as private insurers in the United States are.
* And not in the sense of a certain Power G
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And people HAVE experienced american-style health care, been bankrupted by it, something that just doesn't happen in Kanuckistan.
And of course, there are outcomes where people live a decade longer in Canada with the same disease than they do in the US [www.cbc.ca].
Also noted in the article is that Canadians have much higher access to organ transplants than the US:
The study found a greater proportion of patients in Canada had transplants (of any organ) - 10.3 per cent of patients vs. 6.5 per cent.
That's 58% more access to organ transplants. As for the drugs, anyone can import a 6-month supply of pharmaceuticals into Canada for personal use provided th
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Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
....found the American!
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But making it a government program makes it undisguised socialism
The whole world doesn't have America's phobia for the word socialism. Probably worth remembering that when discussing other countries.
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Small-s social security in Canada (Score:3)
The demand being made on participants is that they already qualify for social security benefits.
Social security isn't a Canadian program.
Small-s social security [wikipedia.org] is certainly a Canadian program. It's called Old Age Security, Canada Pension Plan, and provincial programs. (source [wikipedia.org])
("Small-s" means the generic concept as opposed to the proper name of a specific program in a specific country.)
Money is a tool of our own making (Score:3)
Society can choose to use that tool in a variety of ways. Mostly it's used as a dishonest form of social classing and the subsequent population control - One step up from serfdom.
It's possible this may change in the future.
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But should we also be supporting people who are certainly capable of working, yet choose not to?
Yes. The alternative is worse, plain and simple. The universe is not inherently fair and as such we must choose between suboptimal solutions. Ask yourself what's worse: paying higher taxes or having more crime in your society? (Debt and poverty destroy your ability for rational thinking and lead to crime.)
Give them a central kitchen, let them have food and shelter, and no more. If they want any luxury beyond this, let them go out and work for it, like the rest of us.
That is in essence the idea of UBI. It is meant to be a subsistence income. Any luxuries still require acquiring resources beyond the UBI. By the way: a smartphone and a computer are not luxuries, nor are
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I mostly agree with the absurdity of UBI "pilot' programs, the premise of them is based on their universality and the lack of concern with how people spend their individual UBI payments.
So once you eliminate the universal part, what's left? It almost seems like they want to evaluate how the recipients spend their UBI payments, and of course, to reach the conclusion that the money wasn't spent well, and thus UBI would be a failure.
Part of the problem with UBI, IMHO, though, is that some of the advantages ar
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Yes, the best UBIs operate kind of like a negative income tax, ultimately getting cancelled out above a certain income level.
But AFAIK, there's really only spreadsheet models and estimates of whether its increased costs would be payed back by the elimination of benefit administration bureaucracies.
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If they want any luxury beyond this, let them go out and work for it, like the rest of us.
Time for a reality check. "Like the rest of us" is already a minority. Slightly less than half the total population works. Total working = 152,528 (February 2017). Total population = 325,874,000. So the total working population is 46.85%. And it's going to get worse as more people continue to retire than are born. And that's not including projected job losses in the millions as automation play the grim reaper to those jobs that are left.
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You're the one who's obviously not as smart as you think. There are more people retiring than there are people being born. The people on both ends of the age spectrum need to be supported. The younger ones also need to be educated. Part of the problem is that the baby boom is over, and people like you haven't realized the full implications when the work force, which used to be many times the size of those who don't work (including the young and the old and the ill and the retired) are now being supported by
Re:It's not universal if it's not for everyone (Score:5, Insightful)
But should we also be supporting people who are certainly capable of working, yet choose not to?
I think that is the goal we should be striving for. I like the John Adams line: "I must study Politicks and War that my sons may have liberty to study Mathematicks and Philosophy. My sons ought to study Mathematicks and Philosophy, Geography, natural History, Naval Architecture, navigation, Commerce, and Agriculture, in order to give their Children a right to study Painting, Poetry, Musick, Architecture, Statuary, Tapestry, and Porcelaine."
Or more simply, "I am a soldier so my son can be a shop-keeper and so his son can be an artist."
I think it will be a long time before we get close to the kind of post-scarcity economy that would allow this kind of lifestyle though - if ever. Maybe it can only exist in the realm of science fiction. But I think it is a noble goal to strive for.
In the meantime though: I agree with you. I think if we're going to have a UBI or whatever social program it should be based on subsistence and survival for now, with a view to getting people to want to join the economy if they want more.
fact is (Score:2)
Fact is that nobody has shown that giving people lots of free stuff produces anything other than poverty in the long run.
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Are you suggesting that it has been proved that giving people free stuff produces poverty in the long run? Worse poverty than if they had been given nothing?
This is an experiment, like many others, that is attempting to see what happens, maybe even prove that giving people free stuff is beneficial.
Oh and Fact is that while the use of the ellipsis in the summary may not be ideal, it is pretty clear that "Fact is" belongs with the next sentence, as in:
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Fact is that nobody has shown that giving people lots of free stuff produces anything other than poverty in the long run.
So show the controlled studies that prove that giving people free stuff results in poverty in the long run. Bill Gates got lots of free stuff from his folks. Seems that people born in privilege do okay financially.
Re:fact is (Score:5, Informative)
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how about employer of last resort? (Score:2)
If people are worried about joblessness, I have a better idea: make people actually work for their "universal basic income". The government has more than enough things for people to do: clean streets, maintain parks, go around as census takers, etc. As a bonus, people get basic experience actually holding a job and showing up for work.
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Good grief! You don't even know what "hard work" means.
Which is, of course, the exact opposite of what you were accusing Calvinists of earlier ("rich people are good, and poor people are bad"), since if it is predestined, it isn't a moral failing.
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So, get people to sweep the streets. Great way to put municipal workers, who actually know how to drive the street sweeper, out of a job. "Bt that's okay - they'll be able to collect UBI in return for sweeping the streets." Any you create another layer of bureaucracy, because now you need more supervisors to supervise untrained people to do the job than you would with trained, experienced people.
Your idea won't work. It will just turn a few good existing jobs into crappy make-work schemes for many while l
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Except that automation was not a factor threatening most jobs in that era, the way it is now. And everybody agrees that automation is a good thing: it increases process efficiency, and hence productivity, of most processes, saving companies money. Like your self service check-out aisles at Costco or Walmart, or replacing government bureaucrats w/ automation that includes OCR based application & approval processes. As more jobs get automated, leaving fewer jobs that people are capable of doing, the c
Alaska!!!1!! (Score:2)
There's no reason the country as a who
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Alaska has a population less than a million, which is less than a lot of US cities. So for starters, it doesn't even scale. Second, it's a state that has plenty of oil, so that it can afford to pay that to the few people who live in those areas that they want them to live in.
There is no way such a plan could be implemented in MI, PA, CA, or most states on the mainland
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How much wealth does the 1% have compared to the rest of America? Increase their taxes and you'll suddenly have a whole lot of money that can go around. Of course, these wealthy would need to honestly declare their actual income. Instead of hiding it overseas and exploiting loopholes in the tax code. Loopholes that other 1%ers put in there for the benefit of the wealthy.
Effect of taxation (Score:2)
Re: Participation Trophy (Score:4, Interesting)
Sometimes the best ways to contribute are to pick up garbage in the street, plant flowers, help neighbors, organize games in the park for your community. All these things contribute to a healthy society, and these things go unpaid, and often they don't get done, and communities are shit. House wives used to do it for free, now they don't because women work.
UBI gives people the time to be good people, because they don't have to worry.
Also UBI would also be for open source programmers, and similar people who can't find people to pay them but who are important.
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Re: Participation Trophy (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, me n my unemployed friends just smoke weed all day, then at night we break into coal ash ponds for fun and dump hundreds of millions of barrels worth of contaminated waste water. Good times.
Skittles wrappers aren't the problem.
Re:Participation Trophy (Score:4, Interesting)
How many well adjusted healthy adults do you know who would willingly live at barely above poverty levels and choose (rather than be forced) to not work or perform charity work? I certainly don't know any HEALTHY such individuals. I don't see any reason to not support those so unhealthy that they don't have the drive to work (ideally while they undergo treatment for whatever underlying condition is causing them to CHOOSE to live in such a way). But then again, I don't see universal health care as something to be destroyed.
Re: Participation Trophy (Score:4, Interesting)
First, what's your specialty doctor?
You say a "modicum" of work. Would that be enough to support themselves? Could they keep it up long term? I ask because with the current screwed up structure of disability, any work they do endangers their continued payments. If they do a week's work, the bureaucrats might decide they're good to go when in reality they have to rest up for the rest of the month to recover. Other people have good days where they can do things and bad days where getting out of bed hurts too much.
Under UBI, they could possibly work on their good days to improve their lives and not have to worry about not being able to work on the bad days. Given long enough without the sword of Damocles over their heads, they might start having more good days.
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Re: Participation Trophy (Score:2)
You're making a big HUGE assumption that people will not find a comfort zone in what they get for free and then just stay with that. I know many people on SSI who do exactly this. Hell, forget SSI, I know several who have a comfort zone making nothing and just spend their days playing World of Warcraft.
People finding a minimalist way to simply exist and never growing beyond that simply because they don't have to is actually a well documented issue, and you're sitting here telling me that this actually doesn
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Two things are pretty much certain at this point - 1) The amount of jobs is going to continue to decrease with automation. 2) Population is going to keep rising unless we adopt a China like '1 child per family' law.
All this is going to do is resolve a large subset of the population to crippling poverty. What happens in most of the poor neighborhoods you know of? Why, they happen to be disproport
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I mentioned this elsewhere in this page. A non-governmental mechanism would have to be created for this to work: government would have to be kept OUT of it. For the reasons you described, having government do this will be pure communism; however, if the free market is allowed to do this, w/ UBI built in, that would create a minimum standard of living. Yeah, there will be people who will live within their comfort zone, but there will also be others who will consider that inadequate, and trade w/ each oth
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I once played an MMO where you would eventually end up paying people to NOT show up to raids because if everyone who came entered the raid zone, the game would crash or at least grind to a halt so badly that nobody could play.
You can think of UBI as being the real world equivalent.
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Rational for UBI (Score:2)
UBI I'd basically giving everyone a trophy just for showing up, regardless of actually being productive. Millennials may love this, but it's terrible for productivity. Everyone needs to contribute in some way, but UBI discourages this. But everyone gets a trophy...
The theme here is that when it makes more sense to automate most jobs, including, increasingly, more of the jobs that people are capable of doing, the options before society is to let poverty & homelessness take over, as income sources get eliminated, or have something like UBI. That way, everybody gets to pay for their home & food, and anything beyond that, they have to earn
One thing I'll say, though: any UBI schemes should not be a government run scheme. Reason: governments, aside from being b
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With UBI you'd find it easier to look for a job that you'd enjoy more - and yet you're against it. Must be that, deep down, either you really do like your job, or you don't like ANY type of job. Your pick.
UBI would increase job mobility, which means that a job you might enjoy more, but that is currently being held by someone who feels that they can't risk quitting to try to find something better suited to them, or to create their own job, or to take time to retrain, could more readily open up. But again, y
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Technically, I wouldn't, as I'm not Canadian. You are correct, however, that it probably wouldn't be just the 1% that is paying more in taxes. However, it would likely be mostly the 1% who are having major net losses. The ~$20k bump in income would probably
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Following World War II tax increases, top marginal individual tax rates stayed near or above 90%, and the effective tax rate at 70% for the highest incomes (few paid the top rate), until 1964 when the top marginal tax rate was lowered to 70%. Kennedy explicitly called for a top rate of 65 percent, but added that it should be set at 70 percent if certain deductions weren't phased out at the top of the income scale.[24][25][26] The top marginal tax rate was lowered to 50% in 1982 and eventually to 28% in 1988. It slowly increased to 39.6% in 2000, then was reduced to 35% for the period 2003 through 2012.[23] Corporate tax rates were lowered from 48% to 46% in 1981 (PL 97-34), then to 34% in 1986 (PL 99-514), and increased to 35% in 1993.
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government will ruin any UBI plans (Score:2)
What you are describing is selling a service, not transferring wealth. Paying for building a road, or a school, or the police or fire departments is paying for a service, or in the latter cases, paying out the salaries of law enforcement to keep them employed full time. Transfer of wealth is taking money from Peter, who has a job, to pay Paul, who doesn't. Sooner or later, Peter will figure out that he has more to gain by slacking off (in honor of this site's new owner today) and living a lifestyle simil
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Police departments are NOT "selling a service" when they are municipal employees., Same with fire departments. Same with public roads. Even people who aren't contributing to the tax base (children, visitors from other neighborhoods, etc) benefit equally even though they have no way to "buy" such a service.
Maybe in some hick towns where everything is privatized because there's not enough of a tax base to actually have a full-time professional police or fire department, in which case the city is paying anoth
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And yet you have no problems paying hundreds of millions for security for some rich entitled shitbags to live in Trump Tower, even though they have a paid home in the White House. And to have another lying entitled shitbag who appoints other shitbags to collaborate with the Russians. And more entitled shitbags to take away meals on wheels funding "because it doesn't produce any tangible results". And taking away medicaid from millions of people, because they don't want them to just go away and die - they wa
Consequences on minimum wages (Score:2)
Very good point. I do think that any UBI scheme shouldn't be government driven, since government only gets money from taxes. A different mechanism should be sought. Maybe something akin to bitcoin, or another computing generated currency?
But like you say, once an UBI is in place, minimum wage laws can go away, and companies can resume hiring kids, for whom that's usually their first steps into the workplace. Also, such entry level jobs would be more interesting, since the grunt jobs would mostly have
It's 21:26 on 1 April where I am (Score:2)
So it's been fools day for quite some hours for us.
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When I read "Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld ran a UBI program" I thought, ok, this is it.
Here's a more thorough description of that attempt [thecorrespondent.com] and why it was prematurely aborted. It's really sad that opportunity was missed...
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Conservatives could support it, IF they cut all the programs it 'replaced' on the same day. Otherwise it's just the usual lies being told by the usual liars, using other people's money to buy votes.
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Listener: 5
Lincoln: No, 4. Calling a tail a leg doesn't make it one.
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Not surprising - to most people on this planet, being called an American is likely an insult.
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The prank would be to have Unicode support for April 1st and remove it 24 hours later.
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"Slacker News" and a bad orange design? Hope this stays only on April 1st as a prank.
Yeah, I wondered whether the Slackware Linux project has gained possession of Slashdot?
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Why is it fair for someone, whose never worked an honest day in their life, to live like a king all because their daddy (or even granddaddy) happened to save a lot of money?
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It will only work in countries which don't rely on immigration to gain wealth. It's crazy we give away citizenship in 5 years and then potentially give away a life time of free money. I am doubtful of loyalty immigrants have to their new country of 5 years. Do they care if it succeeds or not? They didn't care to much about their home countries so they left. This will be abused, and people will seek to abuse it, because no true Canadian identity, everyone is in it for themselves, and everyone wants to exploit for their benefit.
It would probably work in places where national pride is real and not engineered from the capital city.
WTF is "no true Canadian identity?" Better yet, what is "Canadian identity?" You want a test to see who is a "true Canadian?" We saw last week that most Canadians were against the house motion condemning Islamaphobia - so most Canadians have proven themselves to be racist ignorant fuckheads on that topic.
"They didn't care much about their home countries so they left." Well, that applies to every single human being on the planet who isn't living in Africa, because that's where humans originated.
This was a [wikipedia.org]
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What First Nations people get from the government is nothing like UBI. It's a much more complicated and insane system than that. Not to mention the generations of systematic destruction of their culture, language, and family structure through things like the Residential Schools system (which is, in all seriousness, the stuff of nightmares).
The national inquiry is about the rate at which they (particularly women) are disproportionately the victims of murder and abduction. It's primarily First Nations people