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accidentally just mixed this audio with the 2020 dolly parton christmas album and loled
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 06:25 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 13:58 |
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here have some prime grade hellworld poo poo to brighten your'e are evening https://twitter.com/iarnsdorf/status/1341882243078348800
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 07:04 |
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thank you goon sir
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 07:48 |
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The Russians used a gun.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 07:49 |
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carry on then posted:I’ve been in a bad place and will do my best to stop unless you’d like me to bring it back again wish you all the best, goon.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 08:03 |
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put all cops in prison https://twitter.com/davenewworld_2/status/1341922489065238528
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 08:16 |
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EIDE Van Hagar posted:it would probably have some inflationary pressure, sure, but you dont actually know how much. your speculation that it would swamp all other benefits and get them cut is just pure speculation. yeah, this whole take indicates that endlessmonotony has bought the right-wing bullshit about the causes of inflation hook, line, and sinker “landlords will raise rent to match UBI” is a right wing talking point because it completely ignores actual economics in favor of a simplistic “sat through the first couple weeks of Micro 101” model that people may feel is authoritative because they heard it in a class once the American economic sphere at least has a pretty huge amount of room between where we are right now with the velocity of money and what it would take to induce serious inflation that’s why there have been so many hugely risky financial bets this century by American investors and industries — we’ve figured out well enough how to manage inflation that there’s basically no room to make a profit (ie invest in risks that pay off) buying debt from the issuer of the reserve currency, so those who want to make one have to go to more exotic or more risky instruments (or both)
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 08:56 |
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DELETE CASCADE posted:these would kinda have to go together otherwise the ubi will just be captured by increased rent, no? same as increasing min wage if done alone, it’s just another way of transferring money to landlords lol nz is increasing its min wage to $20 an hour next year. our 15 year old delivery person is going to get that so.. the delivery people usually work an hour and a half a day. i let them work till we close to earn a few extra bucks but when min wage kicks in i’m gonna have to reduce their hours to only one hour per day. nice work govt
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 09:02 |
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SmokaDustbowl posted:edmonton no recommending self harm in the pos
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 09:02 |
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EIDE Van Hagar posted:giving people free money will likely cause inflation, but money is fungible. you are focused on landlords for some reason. you know that there are things that people spend money on before rent, right? why is it a subsidy to rent when people are just as likely to spend it on food? there was an ad that was directed at landlords here in nz, in a landlord magazine or something and it was something like, if your tenants can afford to be going out for a drink, they can afford to pay you more rent the ad blew up and got out into the public eye and it was a PR nightmare for the company that ran it but lol not like people went homeless in protest
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 09:07 |
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Jonny 290 posted:it was terrifying to try to date twenty years ago and now you have to run seven apps, swipe right on 327 people a day and eat rear end 3 nights a week before you get to the level where you can learn somebody's last name eating rear end is actually the end goal of dating so we’re kinda lucky we don’t have to marry people first anymore
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 09:09 |
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echinopsis posted:same as increasing min wage lol
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 10:12 |
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do u guys not eat rear end on the first date??
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 13:45 |
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idk i haven’t been on a first date in a long time
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 14:22 |
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echinopsis posted:same as increasing min wage yeah increasing minimum wage usually makes businesses reduce hrs and try to automate more tasks, so it is best to increase it slowly and steadily by tying it to inflation or cost of living somehow. but in the US the minimum wage has remained the same for 30 years. inflation and cost of living changes left it behind as unlivable 25 years ago. the minimum wage in the US in 1968 would be $12 dollars/hr in 2019 dollars if it had been tied to inflation and productivity. today it is actually $7.25 and yeah that may have kept mcdonalds corporate from automating some things but it’s not a livable wage.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 14:33 |
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Jonny 290 posted:it was terrifying to try to date twenty years ago and now you have to run seven apps, swipe right on 327 people a day and eat rear end 3 nights a week before you get to the level where you can learn somebody's last name lmao
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 14:35 |
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looking forward to seeing jonny appear on the dating game
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 14:50 |
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eschaton posted:yeah, this whole take indicates that endlessmonotony has bought the right-wing bullshit about the causes of inflation hook, line, and sinker on the other side of things you can look at what the proliferation of higher education debt has done to the cost of higher education. it's no accident that the increase in average cost per semester tracks pretty closely with subsidized federal financial aid availability and awards there's a very real concern that ubi, in a vacuum, would allow landlords in areas with limited housing stock to raise their rent indiscriminately. all of the normal pressures you'd expect to find (relocation, new construction, etc) are mitigated by their tenants being held captive to the local housing market by their place of employment or any other number of factors would definitely be curious to see whatever research you've read on this topic that provides a bit more nuance. it's been years since i worked in public housing research (not ubi oriented) and i definitely haven't kept up on it
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:10 |
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weird and useless data points from the frozen north despite the widespread availability of CERB (not UBI, but a broadly applicable EI replacement) rents have not increased by the CERB amount. in fact rents have decreased month over month since february in the major cities. toronto specifically does have rent control, but it's not universal. however, the rental price decreases are likely due to a combination of slightly reduced demand (some people are moving out of the city if they no longer need to be here for work) and vastly increased supply (significant restrictions on Airbnb and short term rentals, both in general and covid specific have units going back on the long term market). thanks to 2020 we're no longer the most expensive rental market in the country, and that's with a broadly eligible, up to $2k per month, income supplement.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:31 |
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Blinkz0rz posted:on the other side of things you can look at what the proliferation of higher education debt has done to the cost of higher education. it's no accident that the increase in average cost per semester tracks pretty closely with subsidized federal financial aid availability and awards I'm aware of all that and all points on both sides, and you've more or less got the main reason I'm so skeptical. There's a whole separate point about how our healthcare systems are intertwined with the employment system so a lot of diseases aren't noticed until they make it hard for you to work, so an UBI you can live on would require radical transformation of our healthcare systems to screen for these diseases, otherwise people would just carry on with awful, curable diseases because they don't know they're not supposed to feel like poo poo. My own disease was finally found this way - alas, it's incurable, though treatable so the pain's mitigated now. Obviously way more relevant a point on EU side. Which is why the EU-funded UBI makes me go "huh, that actually neatly sidesteps all the usual problems assuming you can't be expected to live on it", but that intertwines with the EU politics and asks hard questions on how to best fund it to stabilize the internal EU economy. I'm in favor of straight up printing the money and just eating the inflation hit.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:31 |
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Inflation happens when you print money. We aren't asking for that. We want to take money from rich people. One dollar in, one dollar out. If the economy is destroyed by jeff bozos only having 20B instead of 200B then it deserves to be destroyed.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:41 |
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Salt Fish posted:Inflation happens when you print money. We aren't asking for that. We want to take money from rich people. One dollar in, one dollar out. lol it would if you assumed the economy makes simple sense. You don't even need to tax rich people, and for the EU, the superior answer is not doing that and instead sidestepping the entire issue to stabilize the EU economy. Dollars are just numbers. The value of wealth they represent does change all the time. Money is a medium of exchange, not a store of value - its value changing even in large ways is just fine if you can predict the rate and compensate for price stickiness and change pressures. Inflation's a problem when it's unexpected or when it reduces the buying power of the people with already low buying power.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:47 |
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and this is why i think economists, much like high level mathematicians aren't actually human beings
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:54 |
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Salt Fish posted:Inflation happens when you print money. We aren't asking for that. We want to take money from rich people. One dollar in, one dollar out. no one is talking about inflation (in the macro sense) as a reason to avoid ubi. it honestly doesn't matter where the money comes from to fund it the concern is that without sufficient controls on price, there are a number of essential resources - housing, health, food as the first 3 off the top of my head - that don't respond to supply and demand in all situations. sure, ubi would probably have very little effect on housing prices in bumfuck iowa because supply outstrips demand, but folks who live in cities or other areas with limited housing stock and don't have the ability to leave are captive to whatever a landlord wants to charge basically to have ubi work effectively, you need to put price controls on housing, health care (or just have mfa), and groceries to ensure that the cost of living isn't raised as a proportion of the new money that everyone has in their pocket
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:57 |
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Casual Encountess posted:and this is why i think economists, much like high level mathematicians aren't actually human beings they're lizards op
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 15:57 |
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Blinkz0rz posted:no one is talking about inflation (in the macro sense) as a reason to avoid ubi. it honestly doesn't matter where the money comes from to fund it iirc those things are “elastic” right? trying to recall some of my micro econ 101 terminology.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 16:14 |
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also, lol at trump’s demand for bigger direct payouts totally loving with congressional republicans
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 16:15 |
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btw landlords pushing up rents in situations with guaranteed income is a known issue and is a reason that landlords can only charge section 8 renters "fair market rents" (calculated by hud) for their apartments before the subsidy is paid
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 16:27 |
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Blinkz0rz posted:btw landlords pushing up rents in situations with guaranteed income is a known issue and is a reason that landlords can only charge section 8 renters "fair market rents" (calculated by hud) for their apartments before the subsidy is paid yes, but rent increases happen irrespective of UBI, and landlords still have to compete for those UBI dollars against other things, for section 8 housing vouchers that money is earmarked for rent only and UBI is not. rents are higher in places where it is more desirable to live, that’s not going to change unless you eliminate all private real estate which just ain’t happening.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 16:54 |
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EIDE Van Hagar posted:yes, but rent increases happen irrespective of UBI, and landlords still have to compete for those UBI dollars against other things, for section 8 housing vouchers that money is earmarked for rent only and UBI is not. there's a difference between private property ownership and speculative ownership designed to leech money from folks who have little to no alternatives abolish all scum sucking landlords they provide no value of any kind
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 17:01 |
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Salt Fish posted:Inflation happens when you print money. We aren't asking for that. We want to take money from rich people. One dollar in, one dollar out. inflation doesnt happen when you print money. it happens when more money is flowing into usage on things that inflation tracks faster than the supply of those things is increasing, something like that. you can print a trillion dollars directly into jeff bozos dragon hoard and inflation wont really move. in fact we did just that this year and inflation officially hasnt gone up more than a normal year
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 17:07 |
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fart simpson posted:inflation doesnt happen when you print money. it happens when more money is flowing into usage on things that inflation tracks faster than the supply of those things is increasing, something like that. You can't have both goon arguments at the same time: 1) Jeff Bezos isn't really *that* rich, his money is all in stocks not some vault filled with gold 2) Jeff Bezos has a dragon hoard that doesn't impact the economy because its effectively "dead" money I would say that obviously his money is circulating like crazy. It doesn't cause inflation when he spends a billion to acquire twitch or a billion to build a dozen new distribution centers, and it wouldn't cause inflation if that money was spent by someone else on something else. It's fake fear mongering to protect the rich. If we're worried some shitbag landlord or insurance agent is going to try to steal the extra money then just put them in a gulag and be done with it.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 17:53 |
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infernal machines posted:weird and useless data points from the frozen north housing costs seem to be entirely based on supply and demand and pretty much nothing else. ubi would probably have minimal impact on housing since the only thing it might do is slightly increase demand in a few places.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:00 |
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https://twitter.com/CopingMAGA/status/1342107761769918467
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:12 |
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President Beep posted:also, lol at trump’s demand for bigger direct payouts totally loving with congressional republicans the gop rejected the $2k, so now they are going to try again on monday since they are going home for the weekend note that all of the unemployment stuff expires after saturday and the federal government shuts down on monday if trump doesn't sign the existing bill, which he already vetoed. pelosi just got played by trump, thinking that his endorsement of bigger checks meant that the gop old-guard would go along with it, except they really don't care if you die in a gutter
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:22 |
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Shaggar posted:housing costs seem to be entirely based on supply and demand and pretty much nothing else. ubi would probably have minimal impact on housing since the only thing it might do is slightly increase demand in a few places. not even this is *that* obvious, since given more location-independent income it might be more doable for people to move away from the worst housing markets. in general ubi would likely have its biggest impact kickstarting the local economies of otherwise dwindling rural towns. but generally this is a whole lot of speculation with very little in the way of facts, testing ubi is extremely hard as time-limiting it takes away a huge component of what it ostensibly is.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:23 |
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i was once a grifter like you, but then i took an arrow to the wrist.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:24 |
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Taking money away from billionaires and giving it to people who are struggling to feed themselves is the right thing to do and we don't need to test it. It's such a moral imperative that we have to try it even if it doesn't work.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:30 |
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You could come to me with a study that was peer reviewed by every scientist on earth that said "if you take money from billionaires and give it to people who are starving every human will be dead within 10 years" and I would tell you to pass that poo poo into law ASAP.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:32 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 13:58 |
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a normal strong social safety net and worker-friendly regulation is rather more tried and true is the thing though. there being broader support for ubi is, i think, largely illusory.
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# ? Dec 24, 2020 18:34 |