• TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    A buddy of mine was injured by an IED in Afghanistan, he lost his right eye. Every year he goes to the VA for his regular checkup and the doctor has to sign some paperwork that he then needs to get notarized. Social Security says they need all that to make sure he’s still disabled… you know, checking that he hasn’t spontaneously regrown an eyeball miraculously and would then be cheating the system I guess. Our benefit system for disabled people is really fucking broken.

    • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      My buddy’s leg is like that for the same reason and goes through the exact same process. Still no leg.

    • jimmycrackcrack@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      The cost of this and thousands of other pointless assessments by qualified medical professionals probably costs more than people receive in benefits in the first place let alone the cost of a handful of cases of actual fraud.

      • TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        What is America up to now, three admin/clerical jobs per every two doctors? The insurance companies complicate things so much.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Yeah, if it wasn’t artificial there would be a system to register a disability as impossible to recover from for stuff like loss of body parts.

        • TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          If he forgets his appointment or can’t otherwise make it, it can take weeks if not months for a VA doc to see him and, in the meantime, he could lose his benies for like 6 months.

  • Glitch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 month ago

    Buddy of mine has no eyes. Has to get reevaluated every year. Still doesn’t have eyes. Probably won’t next year, let’s check just to be sure

  • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I was turned down with genitofemoral neuropathy because the government insists on record of ongoing treatment. The only continuous treatment for nerve damage is pain management, and I can’t take opiates.

    I’ve paid into Social Security for 25 years, yet I can’t access my own money when I’m in desperate need of it. Fuck this system.

    • hobovision@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      This sounds silly, but could you fill your opiate prescription and just toss the pills? Maybe you can find a doctor willing to record your ongoing treatment as whatever works for you.

      • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        The disability attorneys I’ve spoken with say it’s a double-edged sword. The government is also reluctant to support indefinite opiate treatment (with good reason). They said I’d have better luck applying for SSI citing the psychological effects from the pain rather than applying for SSD for the disability itself.

  • Mk23simp
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    1 month ago

    I would go further, especially considering the context:

    Give people a survivable wage.

    Regardless of whether they can work or not. People’s survival should not be contingent on working. Give people what they need to survive as a baseline, and then if they want to work for more, they can negotiate for employment on equal terms.

    • Starbuncle@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      Even if a universal basic income makes things more expensive, it will make things more expensive by less than the amount that average people will benefit from it. It also reduces economic inequality.

      • Schadrach@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 month ago

        Universal basic income (like a bigger one than you are probably thinking), universal healthcare, eliminate most other welfare programs (UBI filling that role in place of things like SNAP and TANF, the remaining ones should be narrowly targeted and temporary - think WIC), institute a maximum wage (highest compensated person in a company can make no more than X% of the least compensated and Y% of the median compensated employee - makes it so that for executives to get a raise that rising tide has to lift every boat).

        • Starbuncle@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          The only issue I have with that last suggestion is that contracts can blur the line between being employed at a company and not. For example, obviously a contract employee should be subject to the same level of minimum wage, but what about if a company hires another company? What stops some big tech company from just getting all of their janitors from a contract with a janitorial company that doesn’t have to pay their people nearly as much? I think that windfall taxes on the 0.1% and a big UBI are the way forward.

          • yrmp@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            It’s okay. We don’t have to think about this in the USA because leftists wanted to teach democrats a lesson on Gaza*

            *Gaza will be destroyed in its entirety over the coming years.

        • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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          1 month ago

          Because raising the minimum wage is easy and happens all the time, the same should be true of.a UBI. /$

          $7.25 an hour

  • Hupf@feddit.org
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    1 month ago

    So if she doesn’t attend she gets denied for missing appointments and if she does, she’s obviously not disabled enough, right?

  • rational_lib@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    All these government benefits programs are ready to deny 100 valid people benefits if it means they stop one instance of fraud. Because only the one instance of fraud gets attention in the corporate media.

    • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      All these government benefits programs are ready to deny 100 valid people benefits if it means they stop one instance of fraud.

      That’s my criticism of conservatives obsessing and crusading over welfare fraud. Sure, fraud happens, what system is fool proof? But conservatives make it as though it is prevalent when statistics show that it’s not (I don’t know about the US but in UK welfare fraud is statistically not a big of an issue as it is made out to be). I met a guy who is nice and intelligent, and a conservative based from the views he espoused during the conversation, but he obsess over welfare fraud like many conservatives. Just because he personally saw few instances of fraud, he makes it as though it is a pervasive issue.

      • mecfs@lemmy.worldM
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        1 month ago

        worst thing is a lot of their “personal experiences” with fraud are pure bullshit.

        They don’t try to empathise or understand someone who’se disabled. They see their neighbour get out their wheelchair and walk a few steps once and then decide “he’s a frauster”. Never mind that a large chunk of wheelchair bound people have the ability leave their chairs and stand up for short periods of time. They just can’t do it regularly or with any consistency. Or doing it worsens their underlying conditions.

        But never mind, the conservative genius saw them leave their wheelchair once so now since he never has faced disability and his view is based on simplified steorotypes, thinks the person is faking.

      • bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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        1 month ago

        Yeah, if they didn’t you would have more people apply for disability payments instead of being a profit center for financing corps.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Just a reminder, we spend more preventing welfare fraud than we save by preventing fraud. We could just give cash away on the honor system to everyone who asks for it, and we would save money.

      • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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        1 month ago

        We could also house the homeless for less than it would cost to punish them for being homeless.

        We could feed the world on what we throw away in the US.

  • Luffy879@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    Well, if you cant work you are a shame (and a traitor) for the Working class as Serving the rich would normally be your one and only job. /s

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Putting Dole Up To £1K A Week | Kevin Bridges: A Whole Different Story

    That takes balls. That takes balls, George Osborne, Ian Duncan Smith… looking through disabled people’s doors: “This is your fucking fault, mate, you. We could go after tax-avoiding multinationals. We could go after Vodafone, Starbucks, Amazon, Google, Gary Barlow, but it is your fucking fault. You.”

    “You’re going back to work, mate. We don’t give a fuck how disabled you are. Oh, you’re paralysed from the neck down. We don’t give a fuck, mate. There will be a farm out there looking for a scarecrow. Fucking go to the farm.”

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I’m sorry but a system of currency of some sort is kind of a must in the modern world.

      I can’t reasonably know enough people who I could help do something so that I could get a phone, an e-bike, all the foods that I enjoy, etc etc etc.

      “Abolish money” is a sort of naive thing to say, really. Even in Star Trek, they don’t really explain it, because people can’t even imagine a society really working truly without any currency, because of the problems it eventually leads to. Like even in Star Trek, Picard owns a huge vineyard and has people working there. Why? I’m sure most of the goods are going to be shared without making profit off of them or anything, but still, it just doesn’t really make sense. And they’ve owned that vineyard for centuries.

      Honestly just the systems we have, if we take basically the best of all the systems around the world and take the good and leave the bad and assume very little corruption of non-significant levels and we assume that we actually tax the wealthy properly, I think we could have the world looking radically different in a matter of few decades. I don’t think it’s easy for any humans (including me) to even fathom the effect it would have if people honestly didn’t take as much as they wanted, but as much as they needed, and perhaps a little on top.

      I know of a couple of very fair bosses here in the Nordics who actually pay their employees very well and while they make a bit more as the owner of the company, not really significantly more. I don’t believe even double, let alone triple, whereas usually tens or hundreds of times more than the average worker. Although these aren’t large companies I’m talking about.

      I’m just saying there’s no need to “abolish money”. Money is fine, it’s just being hoarded away from everyone who actually need it and would actually use it.

      How about if we start with “Abolish billionaires” first, we’ll see about how realistic it is about the whole “abolish money entirely” later on, yeah?

      Tangentially related video:

      Putting Dole Up To £1K A Week | Kevin Bridges: A Whole Different Story

      • minnow@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I study the history of money and pre-money economies as a hobby (oh god I’m such a fucking nerd) and you’re 100% spot on. Before coins were invented, societies used ingots of metal. Before that, they used shells and beads. The first currency was used about ten thousand years ago (iirc).

        And yeah, in the times and places throughout history where there wasn’t an available currency, people practiced what was called a “gift economy.” It works great on the small scale, and it still pops up in some communities even today. But on the large scale? Moving between cities, regions, and countries? Some form of currency is an absolute must.

        The problem is that for anything to be used as currency, whether it’s shells or coins, there has to be a critical mass that’s the minimum to sustain an economy. That’s where the hoarders (aka billionaires) are such a problem. As billionaires suck up currency, governments risk having the available currency fall below the critical mass. So, they make more. Which causes inflation.

        So the billionaires really REALLY are the problem.

        • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 month ago

          Please explain why a “gift economy” or mutual aid wouldn’t work on large scale? If anything it would work better as when connections are made with other communities to share resources it increases the varity and abundance of goods and services in your own community. To me, this would be a major incentive to share resources with other communities. The more that is shared, the more you as an individual get to benefit. Where is money needed in this interaction?

          • minnow@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Dunno who downvoted you because this is a valid question.

            Now I’m just a hobbiest and my interest is more about the form money takes than the economics. That said I’ll do my best to answer.

            Imagine each community as a bucket, and the economic strength of that community as water in the bucket. As long as the water in the bucket is moving, it will stay fresh and healthy, but if it stops moving it becomes stagnate and unhealthy. Movement represents economic activity.

            Taking water from one bucket to another increases water movement, which is good. However, taking too much water from a bucket to another bucket, without putting enough water back in from elsewhere, creates the risk of that one bucket will get too low on water. Not enough water and the water can’t move, and it begins to stagnate. So, each bucket has an incentive to keep a certain amount of water in it. When we’re not moving water between buckets, it’s simply not a concern. But when we are, we have to be careful. Now, if all the buckets are small then it gets real easy to see when a bucket is getting low and to do something about it. However, as the buckets get bigger it gets harder and harder to judge if there’s enough water and if it’s moving enough. Smart people start saying things like “we should keep track of how much water we need, how much we giving to other buckets, and how much we receive from other buckets.”

            If water in our metaphor is economic strength, each drop of water has a certain about of economic value. This is where currency becomes helpful. If I come from City A and I have some shells that are acting as a storage if economic value, then I can trade those shells at City B for something of theirs with economic value, say, a cow hide. I’ve just taken “water” from “bucket” City B, but using the shells I’ve simultaneously given them “water” from “bucket” City A. This (assuming equal and fair) trade keeps the water level in any particular bucket from getting too low or too stagnant. It also makes it easier for people to monitor the water and take action to fix any problems.

            So, a small secluded village practicing a gift economy all by itself has little to worry about. But whole nations practicing non-stop trade between each other risk the possibility of deficit trading, and they have an obligation to their people to keep their economy strong and moving. Money makes this A LOT easier.

            That said, gift economy is still practiced today from time to time all around the world. You’ll even encounter it in the poorer parts of America where people have the “neighbors help neighbors” attitude. It’s just unfortunate and ironic that people in those places are usually the type to be all in on capitalism, and would get upset if you told them they weren’t practicing capitalism amongst themselves. But that’s an education issue.

            • Dasus@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              I downvoted him, because it’s a naive take I’m bored of trying to argue against, as I know the passion that guy probably has, and that he’ll change his mind once he understands it better. (I really don’t want to write “gets a few years older”, but essentially…)

              He says:

              I still don’t see how this makes an economy based on mutual aid impossible at a large scale

              If you’re willing to settle for an amish-level of technology and diversity of product, sure, it’s not literally impossible. Me on the other hand, I like my electronics and being able to buy a wide variety of foodstuffs and other products from all over the world.

              • minnow@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                I’d say it’s not literally impossible regardless, but it would certainly be really REALLY fucking difficult. Like, “only” figuratively impossible. That’s just how useful money is; it’s profoundly useful.

                Anyway, it’s all good, no worries. Some people just struggle to wrap their minds around this stuff, what can ya do?

                • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  An advanced society without currency does not work.

                  If you’re satisfied with amish level of tech and diversity of product, then sure, currency isn’t needed.

                  Anything more and it just is.

                  Respectfully, read about history of currency or something. Currency isn’t exactly synonymous with money. In everyday use yeah, but not 100% the same.

            • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              1 month ago

              I still don’t see how this makes an economy based on mutual aid impossible at a large scale. Value is arbitrary anyways. For example, wood in somewhere like New England is easy to come by and therefore wouldnt have the same value that it would in somewhere like Nevada. Which is why I think trying tk track value is an inefficient way to track economics anyways. In a super simple way, mutual aid operates off of need. One community needs wood, so a community with an abundance of wood would give to the community that needs it. Mutual aid operates entirely off of need, as it is in overly simplistic terms charity that goes both ways. You give without expecting something in return and others do the same.

              In other words, at a small scale a transaction using mutual aid is basically this. Person A needs salt to make a meal, Person B has salt to spare and so they share with Person A. Maybe at some point down the line Person B ends up needing something, and if Person A can provide they will, or maybe Person C will help. On a large scale you’d simply be replacing Person A with Community A, same with B and C. Trade shouldn’t be about moving value, but about meeting needs. So I do not see why money is needed to facilitate that, as even currently we need to keep track of the specific resources that move, but also the value and money that moves with it. Mutual aid would remove the extra record keeping that comes with needing to also track value and money, as well as remove the unbalanced relationship tracking value brings.

              By unbalanced relationship I mean that when value is what you are concerned about you don’t care about meeting needs, you care about matching or profitting off of value. Rather than building your economy to meet peoples needs, you build to distribute something of the highest value and profit, which results in those that struggle financially being ignored. Look at tourist economies. Rather than producing a good, they produce a service, that service only really benefits people from away who have the money to spend on being a tourist. The people who live in these areas then struggle to find housing food, entertainment, etc because the communities money and resources are directed to what is profitable, like tourism.

              I would like to also say thank you for not being agressive or rude, I am genuinely trying to understand your point of view and simply sharing mine so you can understand where I am coming from. Correct me if I am misunderstanding anything you said.

              Edit: sorry I feel like I didn’t address your points here well. With mutual aid I don’t feel like the water bucket analogy works as it is about meeting need, not moving value. If a bucket stagnates then that means they are self reliant, but don’t produce enough to help others. A sweet spot where they don’t need to take anything in, but aren’t doing well enough to help others. And in the case of making sure you aren’t exporting more than you can handle (Holodomor moment), money doesn’t make handling that easier. Money doesnt distinguish between wheat, wood, and cotton. It lumps the value of it all together. To prevent giving too much it would be simpler without money as you would just track the goods themselves, how much you need compared to how much you produce.

              • minnow@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                Let’s establish a few things.

                All forms of economics operate off of needs. Modern economists use the term “demand” but it’s the same thing. You seem to be drawing a distinction between “need” as a necessity (high demand) versus “not need” as a luxury (low demand).

                I assure you, the bucket analogy works exactly the same with mutual aide aka gift economies as it does with any other form of economics. The fact remains that a geographic area contains a finite amount of resources, representing the total potential economic strength of the region. Some of these resources are renewable, which can help keep that local economy strong, but if the system becomes over stressed by too much being taken out too quickly then that economy is going to be in trouble.

                One thing I think you’re missing is that a lot of the issues you’re highlighting in our discussion aren’t the result of a specific form of market activity, but failure of government to properly regulate their economy. Places that rely on tourism, for example, are poor because their governments are captured by capitalists (ie the people who provide the capital to build businesses) who then extract value from said community (taking water from the bucket) without putting enough back in. Governments could prevent that by using their regulatory powers to keep that money in their local economy through a variety of means, such as taxation, welfare programs, controlling what businesses they allow, creating incentives for locally own businesses or businesses of certain types, etc. That they don’t do this is a failure of government, not of economics.

                I also want to reiterate that the use of money isn’t mutually exclusive to gift economies (or mutual aide as you seem to insist on calling it). Money is a facilitator of trade, a storage of value. Economies are the means by which value is moved and used. If you give me a sandwich today because I’m hungry, and I give you $5 tomorrow so you can buy a soda, we’ve both participated in gift economy market activity. I do this all the time with my friends; I refuse to keep track of who gives who what, because we all help each other as needed and I trust them to help me in return. At work, I sometimes bring snacks for everyone, and one of my coworkers sometimes gives me a $20 too help pay for those snacks. That’s gift economy activity, but with money.

                The money just makes things easier. So much so that non-money currency was invented several thousand years before money was invented. Even when people only practicing gift economy, they still found benefit in having a highly mobile, durable storage of value.

                • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  1 month ago

                  An issue though is governments will inevitably get corrupted, there is no way to ensure positions of power don’t fall into the wrong hands. So to combat this, I feel the only decent solution is anarchist means of organization. The issue now is that because the economy is still controlled by money, there is inentive and thus risk of hoarding money which would create hierarchy and thus bring us back to systems of unconsentual government. And as I said, abolition of money would remove that. I ain’t suggesting we just go ham with unregulated production and thus create scarcities, like you say. But the solution is to have people solve that themselves, not relying on money and government to regulate it. Kroptkin talks about much of this in Conquest of Bread. If you’re interested, I would encourage a read, but I ain’t gonna just say “read theory” and drop it cause I know that accomplishes nothing in reaching understandings. Its in the end, to me, an issue of money will always create inequality, and governments will always become corrupt. So what do you do?

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Your answers made me think of this video: WKUK - Anarchy.

            If anything it would work better as when connections are made with other communities to share resources it increases the varity and abundance of goods and services in your own community.

            No offense but I don’t think you really understand logistics too well. How many people do you know who make smartphones? What about GPU’s? Fridges? Airfryers? Ebikes? How many people do you know who maintain the connections we have in the Atlantic so the internet works? Some of those guys practically live on subs and in several ports around the world as they travel. How are they supposed to manage to produce “help” to have to be able to trade with in the ports they visit if they need something?

            Almost as if they needed a medium of exchange, otherwise known as currency.

            Moneyless societies aren’t impossible, per se, they’re just inherently primitive.

            • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              1 month ago

              Heres the thing though. Areas for distribution of specific goods would still exist. Grocery stores for food, electronic stores, etc. You would still have nodes for distributing goods, you just wouldnt have money to decide who gets to have things and who doesn’t because frankly we don’t need it. You would change production till you meet demand. So people who don’t like you mention wouldn’t have a harder time getting what they need because it would be like how they already get it, just without money in the way.

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                You would change production till you meet demand

                Like I said, no offense, but I don’t think you understand logistics too well.

                “Just give everyone whatever they happen to want.”

                100 pieces of a highly sought out thing. 10 000 people who want it.

                What happens? Perhaps there could be some sort of “help-credits” to indicate how much common good you’ve done, and then you could offer a certain amount of those to indicate just how much you want that rare thing the production of which can not be increased? Oh wait, right, that’s currency again.

                • stratoscaster@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  Honestly… Full offense. You can’t just “scale production” to meet demand. Some demand is inelastic. Some resources there just literally aren’t enough to go around for everyone.

                • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  1 month ago

                  What is something that meets that criteria? I am not interested in debating hypotheticals unless they have some basis in reality. What is something that has a higher demand than there is supply and also can’t be fixed by simply increasing production or developing an alternative that can be produced?

        • iii@mander.xyz
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          1 month ago

          There was accounting, before there was money, so I’ve learned.

      • Pips@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 month ago

        I found the Orville interesting as a thought experiment since their currency was reputation. Not sure how feasible that is, but nice to try to speculate how you’d have any kind of economy post-scarcity.

      • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 month ago

        Money will always lead to a desire to hoard it. Money creates that greed and is something that should be abolished. Money simply acts as an unnecessary middle man to the distribution of goods. Money has to be abolished alongside the concept of property. Communal ownership is what would allow money to be done away with. And people would work and contribute because they would get to reap the benefits just as much as anyone else. Thats what mutual aid is. The sharing of resources mutually. I give my goods/services to the community which helps the community, and I get to also reap the benefits of what everyone else puts towards the community. And we have the means to meet everyone’s needs now with the technology and productivity we have now.

      • bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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        1 month ago

        Picard owns a huge vineyard and has people working there. Why

        Harvest party with a hero of Earth seems pretty rad.

    • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Not gonna happen until we have Star Trek tech like matter replicators, and have killed all the bastards who first got their hands on them and try to keep them secret to exploit them for 0 cost high profit.

      • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 month ago

        We have the means to meet everyone’s needs rn. We don’t need some scifi replicator. The only things holding us back is the exploiting class, and people who think a middle man like money is needed. You are holding yourself back. Money is simply a middle-man to the distribution of goods. Through communal ownership of capital and what it produces, you do not need money as people can just take what they need. And people will work and produce because 1. What happens when people don’t do the work? It doesnt get done and you don’t get the goods, so if you want the goods you better ensure its made. If people refuse to do the work then I guess the good isn’t worth making to begin with. And 2. People desire purpose and to be a part of communities, part of that is work. It just might not be the work they are doing currently.

        • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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          And that is totally going to end up with how it is now.

          A subclass of unwanted, uncared about workers that no one gives a single shit about until the tomato is unavilable/too expensive/etc.

          Which is not meeting everyones needs.

          Its meeting you and yours needs.

          • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Genuinely how? If everyone owns things communally without the use of money as a middleman, how does that result in what we have now?

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                That is genuinely the stupidest argument I have ever seen. “Yes a society where property, money, and class is abolished will become slavery.” The reason why slavery in the US was a thing is because of money, property, and class. What you just argued is like those stupid fucking boomer facebook memes where it shows “this is what communism looks like” while showing a picture of like a tent city in the US. How would slavery happen if property is abolished, money is abolished, and class is abolish? There is no structures to force labor, that is the whole point. There would be nothing for someone to hold over anyone as everything they have, everyone else already has. You are literally just making shit up.

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          Through communal ownership of capital and what it produces, you do not need money as people can just take what they need.

          Okay. I need a thing that’s only available in limited amounts and other people are of the mind they need it too.

          What now?

          • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 month ago

            Increase production to meet demand. Build more infrastucture to increase capacity. If demand isn’t being met, do what you have to do to meet demand. If its something urgent, people should discuss how to temporarily ration (in the case of stuff like food) or share (in the case of something reusable like a computer) till they are able to supply enough to meet demand.

            • Dasus@lemmy.world
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              It’s so simple for you, isn’t it, not having to consider reality?

              “Just increase production until you make enough, lol what’s the issue???”

              Let’s say there’s a natural disaster, or a disease wipes out a crop. Not enough to go around for your avocado salad. “Just increase production.”

              Honestly this is exactly why I didn’t reply in the first place. There’s no point in this, you have zero understanding of logistics or basic economy. All you have is a very naive hippie dream.

              • Comrade Spood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 month ago

                If a natural disaster hits other communities can aid. We already have that, look at when Haiti was devastated by hurricanes and earth quakes, look at Florida. People send aid to help till they can help themselves. And in the cases where things aren’t able to be produced enough for everyone like say cars. There are more economical solutions like the various means of public transportation. I am not suggesting everyone gets the finest things, but that their needs are met one way or another. Let the producers and consumers work together to solve problems, not letting an arbitrary market or corporate stouges decide what peoples needs are and how to meet them

      • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Not gonna happen until we have Star Trek tech like matter replicators, and have killed all the bastards who first got their hands on them and try to keep them secret to exploit them for 0 cost high profit.

        This would happen very quickly as soon as someone figures out how to bypass security on them (you just know they’ll require some sort of janky app) and remotely orders a cocktail of bleach and ammonia.

  • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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    This whole thing was settled with Clinton.

    Both sides have voted repeatedly to cut the social safety net, even for the disabled.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      I’m sure the presidential office holds a lot of power but I’m not sure it reaches as far as the UK benefit system.

      That’s been a cruel mess far longer than Clinton did anything to you.

  • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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    Give disabled people who are unable to work a survivable wage

    Hilarious. Ha ha ha. As if.

    Society was already hostile towards the disabled. Just wait to see how much worse it’s going to get.

    I’m not looking forward to it.

  • iii@mander.xyz
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    1 month ago

    I do not think many people would disagree with the title.

    In my opinion: the problems come mainly from freeloaders, that according to me do need to be refused.

    And another problem I envision is the grey zone. Situations like me. I’ve diagnosed CPTSD, am neuratypical.

    Working with other people 5 days a week destroyed me. But I managed to find a solution as a self-employed person. Am I unable to work, or not, what’s the correct government’s opinion on that?

    • Norah - She/They
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      In my opinion: the problems come mainly from freeloaders, that according to me do need to be refused.

      You know that the concept of freeloaders is hogwash that mainstream media perpetuates because it gets views, right? At least under the Australian system, far more money is spent trying to “catch” them, than is spent on them.

      • iii@mander.xyz
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        is hogwash that mainstream media perpetuates because it gets views, right?

        No, I do not know that. Please explain

        At least under the Australian system, far more money is spent trying to “catch” them, than is spent on them.

        Assume far more money is being spend on fire prevention, than what’s currently lost in fire. Then that’s not an argument pro, nor contra, fire prevention.

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          Nah thanks, not about to be sealioned by a 19d old account, don’t have enough spoons for that.

        • HonoraryMancunian@lemmy.world
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          Assume far more money is being spend on fire prevention, than what’s currently lost in fire

          For anyone reading this thinking that this may sound like a good rebuttal: it’s a false equivalence.

          Fire prevention is a worthwhile expenditure, because things being on fire when they shouldn’t is generally very bad. The cost of fire prevention is worth it, especially when lives are at stake.

          Benefit cheat-catching is (or at least should be) purely about net savings. What happens though is the costs outweigh the savings making them pointless, as well as hurting those in who accidently get caught in the net too.

          Don’t fall for specious arguments, folks! A pithy rebutally might sound convincing at first, but don’t be afraid to think deeper about it. And don’t be afraid to ignore the commenter if you believe they’re arguing in bad faith.

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          SSDI is about 1500 a month. That doesn’t even pay rent let alone buy you an expensive truck. Alternative theory he already had house and money prior to stopping working or received a settlement for whatever happened. You have no idea what is actually medically wrong with him but have constructed this elaborate fantasy about uncle Sam buying him a fancy truck on benefits which just can’t be real.

          • PiousAgnostic@lemmy.world
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            Nope not a fantasy it’s a backwater rural thing you see a lot. Neighbor lives rent free on a slice of land his family owns. Lives in a tiny leaky tin roofed “shed”. And wastes his government $$ on a nice truck.

            In rural areas where people do not need much cash to survive, you see this sort of thing. It’s a sad ugly truth.

              • PiousAgnostic@lemmy.world
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                Meth head energetic shinnanageons, leaf blowing the roof of his shack, the most energetic weed cutting I’ve ever seen swinging the weed eater like a scythe, shooting his shotgun next to his dog, screaming it it to quit barking.

                A contractor who worked at my house had actually employed him in the past but had to fire him because he couldn’t stop smoking meth at work.

                Maybe the guy is disabled. I’m not trying to get to know him better, but from my experiences with him the past several years, the asshole is a sponge on society.

    • FundMECFSResearchOPM
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      “freeloaders” is exceedingly rare, it’s mainly a rightwing talking point to erode support for benefits. A high percentage of people with disability who can’t work aren’t even able to get disability insurance.

      it takes years, you need to hire a lawyer, go through extensive medical testing… All that to get a couple thousand a year, and given that you’re not working, it’s barely survivable.

      The only report I read on it was 15 years ago, a report by the general inspector of SSDI they estimated that 1-3% of people applying for disability were fraudulent and they had on average a 0.3% success rate. I wonder if that report is available online, I had read it at the local library.

      • ShareMySims@sh.itjust.worksM
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        People like this will fight tooth and nail to prevent any theoretical “freeloaders” from getting less than minimum wage to survive on at the expense of something like 98.5% of people who make genuine claims (because your description is accurate, it is absolute torture to go through, and this bullshit lie is pushed to manufacture public support to make it even harder), but they accept tax dodging billionaires exploiting society for their own gain as an inevitable part of life they’re happy to put up with because they’ve been brainwashed in to thinking one day it might be them (when the reality is you’re probably thousands of times more likely to become ill and or disabled than you are to become filthy rich).

        It’s so fucking twisted.

        • Norah - She/They
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          I feel like thousands of times is deeply underestimating the odds. There are 801 billionaires in the US, while there are over 70 million people living with a disability.

          Edit: I should add that I agree very much with the rest of your comment.

          • ShareMySims@sh.itjust.worksM
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            Yeah, I didn’t have the energy to go look up the numbers lol I figured thousands still covered hundreds of thousands, but millions might be overshooting it, but you’re absolutely right, thanks.

        • atomicorange@lemmy.world
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          It’s like saying the problem with the criminal justice system is guilty people being found innocent.

          • ShareMySims@sh.itjust.worksM
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            1 month ago

            Unfortunately the justice system does find a lot of guilt people innocent, especially in cases of sexual violence, and or if they have a lot of money and power, so it might not be the best comparison, but I get what you mean!

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            Great parallel. If there is to be error, let it be on the positive side and not hurt those who need help.

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        The exaggeration or outright lying about welfare and social nets for political gain has roots back to the 60s. Reagan used the already created term “welfare queen” to disable even more help. Far easier to taint the whole thing than to improve fraud detection or shudder let the very small percentage of fraud exist while you try to help as many people as possible.

        Republicans hate people. It’s as simple as that.

      • iii@mander.xyz
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        Our respective experiences might differ based on context.

        Where I live, there’s 500k people on disability, on a work age population of around 5 million (1).

        I was offered disability benefits, as I received my diagnosis.

        • FundMECFSResearchOPM
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          You were offered sick leave or permanent disability benefits? In most places those are completely different.

          Someone with CPTSD in my country might get long term sick leave if their condition flares up, but that condition isn’t in the list of those considered for long term disability benefits.

          If getting long term disability in belgium is so early that’s probably a good thing. Lot’s of disabled people in other countries literally die on the streets because they don’t have the physical or financial capital it takes to go through the multi year long draining process it takes to get disability benefits.

          • iii@mander.xyz
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            Permanent, as of the neurological component.

            The CPTSD developed by growing up in an environment not, beneficial for lack of better word, to my situation.

            • FundMECFSResearchOPM
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              That’s really progressive of belgium, you’re lucky to live there.

              99% of countries wouldn’t do that.

              • iii@mander.xyz
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                1 month ago

                Yet, there’s a freeloather problem here.

                By legal definition, there’s not. As anyone that receives disability benefits is legally disabled.

                But in practice.

                • FundMECFSResearchOPM
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                  and your sources to back that up are…?

                  I’m sure like everywhere a couple people cheat the system. But using that to excuse the marginalisation of disabled people who can’t work is disingenuous at best.

                • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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                  I just want to chip in that the definition of “disabled” is more complex than just receiving disability benefits. I’m going to use a UK framework to illustrate what I mean, but my overall argument applies equally to other countries.

                  There are multiple different kinds of disability benefit in the UK. One of them (PIP) isn’t dependent on household income, and isn’t linked to one’s ability to work. ESA is another disability benefit which does depend on income and is also linked to difficulty working. You can get both PIP and ESA, but it’s fairly common for people to get PIP, but not ESA. Being in receipt of either of these benefits would potentially qualify a person as being “disabled”

                  These benefits are also used for gaining access to other resources for disabled people, like a blue parking badge that allows one to park in disabled bays. The easiest way to get one of those is to provide evidence of being in receipt of a benefit such as PIP, but you don’t actually have to be in receipt of any benefit to get a blue badge (and once you do have a blue badge, that is often sufficient ‘proof of disability’)

                  And to complicate things further, if we are talking about disability discrimination, then a person doesn’t need to be in receipt of any of these benefits to be covered by the Equality Act. Many people who don’t even think of themselves as disabled are covered by this legislation, which casts a very wide definition of “disabled”.

                  The TL;DR: is that even the concept of “legally disabled” is complex and context dependent.

        • Norah - She/They
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          I think you’re also misunderstanding what is being “on disability” in other countries? It seems like your government covers long-term (but not lifelong) illness. Mine doesn’t. So the comparison is kind of disingenuous.

    • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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      If a functioning disability safety net means you get an occasional freeloader then that’s an acceptable price.

      • iii@mander.xyz
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        I agree, it’s about trade-offs.

        That’s why my first statement was: I do not think many people would disagree with the title.

        • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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          And then you say “oh but the freeloaders need to be refused”

          No shit, but it honestly just bites the nose to spite the face to even really give a shit about freeloaders. Have a basic vetting system and if someone is being an especially greedy asshole make an example. Trying too hard just hurts legitimate cases. Like anti piracy affects customers more than pirates.

          • iii@mander.xyz
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            Have a basic vetting system and if someone is being an especially greedy asshole make an example.

            That’s exactly what I’m argueing for, the example part not needed. Just weed them out.

    • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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      In my opinion: the problems come mainly from freeloaders, that according to me do need to be refused.

      What do you base your opinion on? Statics or are you talking out of your ass?

    • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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      Its to pay less than motivated individuals can earn and consider if the person can earn a living in their field or profitably be offered benefits during retraining for another. If they can’t then they are disabled did you have a hard one?