Tourist cities should have hotel rooms by the hour that are actually clean when you just want to take a nap.

    • Obinice@lemmy.world
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      But if labour can afford to live, how will we minimise their ability to focus what little energy we leave them with at the end of their shift on improving their situation?

      Paying a living wage is a slippery slope that ends in things like healthcare, education and opportunities being available to all, and that’d make them more than just our bought and paid for production labour, that’d make them our rivals.

    • Colonel Panic@lemm.ee
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      Look at this guy over here. They want to contribute to society and not starve from it. Wild.

  • nnullzz@lemmy.world
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    Instead of mandatory military service like some countries have, people should have mandatory public work for two years. Whether it be labor, clerical/administrative, etc, it could help young people learn a new skill, get guaranteed work to get the started, and could potentially save a ton in taxes. It would also create the opportunity to start getting caught up some things that keep getting swept under the rug like bridge maintenance , etc.

    • maxprime@lemmy.ml
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      Yeah. Similar to this I think junior high should have a bigger focus on being outside. Like one semester should be spend camping or something. It’s such a formative time and so many kids spend it scrolling through reels. There is something so real and unforgiving about Mother Nature that a 13 year old should really know about.

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        The rest of people are already working these mandatory jobs.

        Same type of work, sure, but the fruits of their labour are going towards shareholders. The point of public work is that it’s for the public good.

    • satanmat@lemmy.world
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      I’d include military service in that. But yes mandatory service for everyone.

      Edit. No exceptions if your mom / dad is a senator or anything… medical? Great there is tons of paperwork that needs to be done. Basically every one yeah.

    • 乇ㄥ乇¢ㄒ尺ㄖ@infosec.pub
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      In my country mandatory military service, aka conscription, is used to take away men’s freedoms, you can’t travel, you can’t work, you can’t participate in politics, you can’t go to hotels… Etc… And it’s all necessary for thé but not for me, meaning the generals and the minister’s children don’t go to the military unstead they go to a business school and start companies all over the world, with people’s money… of course

  • t_berium@lemmy.world
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    For me, there would be public holidays that celebrate social, cultural and scientific achievements.

    A day of printing, the decoding of the human genome,… you know - real achievements, not only stories of some ancient folks being tortured to death and such.

        • HonkyTonkWoman@lemm.ee
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          No, not really I suppose. I meant to say “the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November“, but, well… I didn’t do it right.

          “The Tuesday next after the first Monday in November” is the US’s Election Day.

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    Nonprofit versions of vital social tech. If I had the money sitting around, I’d love to start a nonprofit dating site/app. I met my wife on OKC in 2011 before it got bought up and enshittified. It was great and wasn’t geared toward just keeping you engaged (they’re soooooo bad now!). You’d probably have to gatekeep it with a small fee to disincentive bots, but with a relatively small investment, you could create something really useful for folks without preying on anyone’s desperation.

    Signal would be a good model for this sort of thing.

    Edit: typos

      • Revv
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        I think this might want a clean sheet design. At least as I understand it, there are issues with privacy in the fediverse/activitypub vis-a-vis non-public messages. I think it’s also an area where, in order to go the most good, you’d want simple signups and easy engagement (to say nothing of being able to trust that your info has been deleted when you delete it).

        Clearly, I’m here and I value the philosophical underpinnings of the fediverse, but I think it might not be the best fit for dating.

        That said, if you feel like you can solve those problems, you’d be doing a world of good if you’re right.

      • OsaErisXero@kbin.run
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        Idk, isn’t something like OKC like… literally the opposite use case from what ActivityPub/The Fediverse was built to solve?

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    Parking lot lights, that are in/ on each space. That indicates if there is a space available…. Less driving around the lot looking for a space

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      I have seen these in airport parking garages - green when the spot is empty, red when occupied and visible from the end of the aisle.

      What really blew my mind was seeing the exact same functionality for stalls in the restroom.

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      Most every mall in Asian countries I’ve visited has this system already. This may just be a North America being cheap problem.

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        Some North American malls have them.

        The problem is that a lot of American malls are in decline and can barely afford to keep the escalators working, let alone install these lights.

    • TdotMatrix@lemmy.ml
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      Many malls in Toronto have this. And as others have said, airports. Pearson International included.

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    When you get to baggage claim, if you then stand directly at the carousel blocking everyone’s view for more than 10 seconds, trap door opens and a system of pneumatic tubes forcibly jettisons you to the furthest point away in the airport for you to walk back.

    Stand back, wait for your luggage to appear, then approach and get your bag and step back to the perimeter.

    To get my VC funding in 2024, id also pitch that it “has AI” which is just facial recognition and if you get jettisoned twice in the same year, the third time goes into a shark pit or scorpion pit.

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    Prostitution legalized everywhere, with a clean and safe presentation. And nobody should judge people for it in neither side.

  • Boxscape@lemmy.sdf.org
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    You know how the FTC recently banned non-compete clauses (for non-senior roles)?

    They should ban the, ‘and other unspecified duties as required’ clauses too.

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    Candidates for public office should be required to undergo a mental health assessment as part of the process of getting on the ballot, and those who score beyond (above or below, as may be relevant) particular thresholds are barred from seeking office.

    I sincerely believe that there’s no single thing we could do that would provide more benefit to the world than to get sociopaths and narcissists and megalomaniacs out of positions of power. Each and every one of the most notable and contentious politicians in the world today is, if you just take a step back and look at them honestly, blatantly profoundly mentally ill. Enough is enough.

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      The idea itself is fine, but in practice it wouldn’t work. The kind of people you are trying to screen out in the process would just study do give the responses of a passing assessment, probably with the help of heavily paid mental health professionals.

      Psicology is hard to test and prove, most of the things you are looking to test would not be visible in bloodwork or brainscans.

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        Not to mention, who is in control of making the tests? Mental health/aptitude tests have had a history of being at least a little bit racist, kinda like the old ‘intelligence’ tests that were designed to prevent black people from voting.

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      That’ll just be used as a tool to discriminate against certain groups of people. If you standardize it to avoid any personal bias, then it’ll be coachable/trainable and then people will work around it.

      Imo any random person should be able to run for office

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      Skip the psych exam. Restore the “public servant” aspect.

      1. All assets are sold and the cash is placed in a trust that earns 1% interest. When you leave office you get your money back.

      2. 24/7 audio and video coverage of your life as long as you are in office. The toilet is not filmed unless someone goes in with you. Other than that, your life is an open book.

      3. After you leave office, you can teach classes as long as your compensation is no more than the lowest-paid professor at the school that employs you. You can write books. Or you can enjoy your pension. No corporate jobs or partner positions at fancy law firms.

    • Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works
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      The minimum threshold is tricky. Sometimes due to alliance or political dynamic, a party/list struggle to reach 5%. But banning them from running again seems aggressive. An election even lost without any seat nor a public payment of the campaign fee, is a chance for a party to be heard and put back some issues in the debate. Look at the green who often do low score, but sometimes manage to win

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    Is a functional government based on logic and compassion too much to ask/too cliché?

    Renters rights legislation with enough teeth to make present and perspective landlords, both corporate and individual, think twice before not taking care of a property as though they lived there? (Yes, there are stories behind this one)

    I guess a company that actually pays me what I’m worth (which I’m not even really looking for that much).

    • Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works
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      Renters rights legislation with enough teeth to make present and perspective landlords, both corporate and individual, think twice before not taking care of a property as though they lived there? (

      Isn’t it mostly an issue on the US side of the pond (and in other third worlds countries). I believe that most European countries have minimum standards regarding renter right, it’s not perfect (and reality is that changing a furnace takes weeks). But every time I read about US feel likes dystopia.

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        Over here in Portugal there’s the European legislation, but whether if it is enforced or not is another story. Some places get ridiculous, and I’d imagine that happens all over Europe too.

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        I have been seeing reporting from and have had friends in Australia and New Zealand who have been sharing that it is actually much worse down there than it is in the US. Apparently in NZ most of the legislature is made up of landlords, so the laws are particularly egregious and abusive.

    • Zedd @lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      It’s called a B Corp in the US. A public benefit company. It’s for profit, but with a mission. Doctor Bronner’s and Newman’s Own are the two that come to mind.