• Fal@yiffit.net
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    1 year ago

    You’re not using your bed right now. Are you letting a homeless person sleep in it?

    • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That’s not a contradiction. Your, my, and everyone’s bed is for sleeping in. The beds in that store are for accumulation of wealth. This displays the harsh efficiencies of capitalism, because the people in the most need for a bed cannot afford to have one.

      • dwalin@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I belive the beds in a store that sells beds are either to be sold or to help you choose a bed. They are not “fuck you, see how many beds i have” beds

        • 0ops@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          It’ll probably be sold at a discount too since it was for display

            • 0ops@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              I mean I don’t even wanna know how often the average person changes their sheets, let alone their mattress. My parents have mattresses in spare bedrooms older than me.

              Honestly though, display beds aren’t as scary to me as hotel beds

              • I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                SPARE BEDROOMS?!! By this you mean they have beds to spare and yet are not allowing unhoused individuals to sleep in them?? How very dare they. Guest rooms should be illegal. Everyone with a bedroom to spare gets a mini homeless shelter in their house.

                • KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  I mean… that is what early Christians would do. They were radically giving and selfless. They would unironically feed and shelter the homeless.

                  It was as shocking then as it is now.

          • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.one
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            1 year ago

            100%. I have yet to see somewhere that sells display furniture/appliances at full price, usually they knock some off due to shop guests messing around with it, wear and tear

      • bioemerl@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The beds in that store are for accumulation of wealth

        …selling people beds so they have beds to sleep in. Beds that aren’t riddled with bugs thanks to the store not being a homeless shelter.

          • bioemerl@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Best method we have found so far. If you want cookie cutter efficient ass state made beds you can move off to the… Well, every state who has tried has collapsed so you’re shit out of luck.

            • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              You mean like the still-existing and highly complex gift economies of natives all across the globe that have no homelessness?

                • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago
                  • the indigenous economies that I identify with and would be interested in participating in were destroyed by the British 1000 years before I was born.
                  • I’d rather not be a colonizer in an indigenous economy.
                • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Come on now, indigenous people exist in the 21st century and have modern amenities. They just also keep their indigenous economies.

      • workerONE@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        So beds in the store are for accumulation of wealth but then when someone buys them they’re for sleeping in? Deep

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        I do understand the sentiment but the thing is a lot of homelessness isn’t because people don’t have money not exactly. They may have support systems that they can make use of but if they have other problems they may not be inclined to use those support systems.

        You can’t just blame capitalism for homelessness, not exclusively.

        • 31337@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          You kinda can. Capitalism provides no incentive to help this man (actually, it provides a disincentive because the time and/or money needed to help this man could be spent on more profitable endeavors). The support structures that may exist are not capitalistic, are disincentived, and obviously not adequate.

        • livus@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Personally I blame it for the bulk of it in my country. We have a massive housing crisis caused by housing unafordability.

          The middle class here mainly invest in rentals (not stockmarket) and then use them as AirBnBs that sit empty half the time.

          Meanwhile whole families are living in garages or worse, cars. People who are sane and ordinary and work are living in substandard shitholes.

      • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Who are the people in most need for a bed? Isn’t that need relatively equal? I mean, I guess when I was younger I didn’t really need one, but now I’m a wreck without one. I know some guys with copd that only sleep in chairs, so maybe their need is on low end.

        • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          The people without beds, followed by the people that need to replace their beds, followed by people that want to receive a bed for any other reason.

          • psud@aussie.zone
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            1 year ago

            Just because I have a bed doesn’t mean I don’t need one. If I didn’t need it I wouldn’t keep it

            I’m not wanting for beds. But am in need.

            • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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              Infantilize me all you want, that doesn’t change the fact that I’m college educated and in my late 20s. Explain to me why we can’t distribute beds to people based on need. If we can, then please explain why we have to have homeless people.

                • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Tell me you don’t know anything about the homeless situation with telling me. Homeless shelters are not a solution to homelessness.

                • daltotron@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  And they don’t want to live by those rules.

                  Those rules tend to kind of suck, to be fair. Certainly, if I was homeless, and had a dog, I wouldn’t really want to stay in any homeless shelter that banned me from keeping pets, if I didn’t absolutely have to. It’s really funny to me that people try to defend policies against drug use, or against holding drugs on the basis of addiction or something. I dunno, I thought it was a pretty common opinion to just want drugs to be legal since we all drink coffee and monster energy and IPAs anyways, and at this point I’d rather have heroin, or cocaine sprinkled honey buns, if for nothing else than to spice things up a little. Withdrawal symptoms are a sometimes lethal bitch, and that’s gonna be much harder to surmount outside of a shelter, than inside one, though, would be the main point of contention. IME homeless shelters tend to be populated on the usefulness of their service relative to putting up with “actual” homelessness. If your shelter is less useful than being homeless for most people, then most people will choose being homeless over your shelter.

                  And that’s not even really getting into the nonprofit shelters that basically require religious indoctrination on the half of the homeless, which is super scummy, or how lots of homeless shelters are super “out of the way”, and eliminate the homeless’s ability to be self-sufficient, or to seek help from whatever meager support network they tend to have. Or how homeless shelters are full of homeless people, and thus, suck to live in for everyone involved, relative to owning your own tent, where you can just move all your shit somewhere else in the event that you don’t like someone. Or how means-tested support programs tend to usually waste a ton of their budget testing the means of their applicants.

                  Overall I think even probably if you lived in like a communist utopian whatever whatever society with 0.1% homelessness and 99% employment or whatever, you’d probably still have, at the very least, a warehouse where you kept some excess beds, or where people could see which bed they wanted, that sort of thing, so it’s not like this picture is really illustrative of that much beyond just the plain visual irony of it, sort of in a similar genre to other pictures of, say, homeless people camping out underneath a huge trump billboard saying he’s building a new hotel or high rise or something. I dunno, this is the sort of shit you see on tiktok side by side with memes saying that jimmy fallon looks like the pink bug from backyardigans.

      • crashfrog@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        If anything this guy is a lot less in need of a bed than someone who hasn’t trained themselves to be able to sleep in a doorway (to wit, me.)

  • Snapz@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    What the fuck is with this thread being overrun with dickheads? Is this the breaking point, has Lemmy reached critical mass?

    The image represents how capitalism uses the myth of scarcity. There’s a bed there, and there’s a human being sleeping on the ground. The lie is that there isn’t enough to go around; that somebody has to go without.

    That’s bullshit. We have everything.

        • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Then go live in the fucking wood like your caveman ancestors so you can truly live of everything you made yourself.

          Society is built on the shoulders of those before them, that they themselves built on the shoulders of those before them.

          Stop being a dick and go help someone in your community, you will probably learn a thing or two.

          • Dra@lemmy.zip
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            1 year ago

            If someone creates something to trade it for goods and services, thats fine, even if that means its free at the point of consumption.

            If someone creates something for their own reasons, you have no entitlement to it. Please try to be less emotional with your responses, this is a discussion platform meme page after all.

            • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Your initial point is that no one deserves what someone else did. My counter point is that since the dawn of humanity, every human has used someone’s else idea or tool to make their life better.

              So yeah, you owe it to everyone around you for the lifestyle you have right now.

      • duffman@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        That’s not the message either. There are homeless shelters, mental and health services, and affordable housing being priotized all over.

        Necessities are in large free to those who need them. Nice to haves and luxury beds are not.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      The annoying thing is that there will very likely be a homeless shelter in this city that he’s not allowed to sleep in because they have a zero tolerance drug policy.

      • Nalivai@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        That’s just unfaithful interpretation of the argument, and you know it. US on average has 27 empty houses per a homeless person.

        • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s technically true, but really not important. Houses are defined as vacant if they’re unoccupied on the day of a census. There’s many reasons a house might be technically vacant, but not currently be able to house a homeless person.

          Was the house just sold, and is it unoccupied for a week or a month between owners? It’s vacant. Did the owner just move into hospice or a memory care unit and their children haven’t yet sold the house because they need to arrange an estate sale? It’s vacant. Is the house under construction but is mostly built? It’s vacant. Is it not safe to live in, but not officially condemned? It’s vacant.

          Want to move to a city? Either you have to find the apartment of someone moving out, or you have to move into a vacant unit.

          Having a good number of vacant homes is a good thing, actually; having low numbers of vacancies in an area leads to housing becoming more expensive because you can’t move into a unit that isn’t vacant. Increasing housing supply relative to population leads to higher vacancy rates, but decreases housing costs.

          Housing-first approaches to homelessness seem to be good in practice. But those are typically done by either government-built housing or government- subsidized housing; it’s mostly orthogonal to vacancy rates.

          • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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            1 year ago

            You might be confused because typically that figure refers to ‘homes’, not ‘houses’. Apartments and other multi-family housing types are included in that figure.

            • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Alright but still. There must be at least a million homeless Americans if not more. That would mean 27 million housing units sitting on the market now ready to go and not be sold or rented out? That dwarfs almost any city in the US, I can’t even picture it. My building has three units for rent all occupied so you would have my building in a line of 9 million other ones I guess it takes about 1 seconds to walk across the front of my building, a line of 9 million would take 2,500 hours just to walk past, or a bit under a third of a year if you walked non-stop 24/7.

              This is very very large number.

              • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Vacant homes are any home that’s not someone’s primary residence when they calculate vacancies.

                That includes vacation homes, temporary housing for traveling workers or college students, houses that are sold or rented but haven’t been moved into yet, housing held up in divorce or estate proceedings, etc.

                According to the census, last year there were 15 million vacant homes. Yes, that’s a lot, and yes, many can’t reasonably have a homeless person live there.

              • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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                1 year ago

                It is absolutely a large number.

                Might also help to know that this number likely also includes AirBNB’s and timeshare rentals. 27 million, spread over 3 million square miles (size of the US) and often in high-density buildings, including units that may appear to be occupied but are transiently used for only a third of the year.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          1 year ago

          Right so the problem is that they don’t have money to buy those homes. It’s still not a problem with the bed store

          • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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            1 year ago

            The problems are:

            • they don’t have money to buy homes
            • they don’t have money to buy beds
            • we accept their suffering as necessary so that someone can make money from selling those things
            • we accept that their life is worth nothing without the value of their labor
            • we abdicate our own responsibility and become complicit by refusing to acknowledge the lack of humanity in this system

            Interpreting everything through individuality is a choice. Just because you refuse to acknowledge systemic injustice does not mean it does not exist.

      • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        The scarcity isn’t primarily the beds.

        Obviously not. The existence of homelessness isn’t due to scarcity at all, it’s to do with a system that tolerates (even necessitates) homelessness. The image could have just as easily been someone sleeping outside an apartment with a sign advertising available units; they sleep, freeze, and starve, because our economic model rejects their basic needs in favor of commodifying them.

        It’s not that hard a concept to grasp, it just seems like people have ingrained the logic of the market in their brains and can’t conceptualize the issue of poverty beyond ‘stuff costs money’.

      • Acters@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Bed stores are a problem. They sit there taking up space for what? To look pretty for people to try out different brands of bed because we like to not figure out a universal solution to the problem of making a comfortable healthy platform of material that we can lay upon for long term rest. On top of that, instead of supplying our nation with affordable housing and furniture, it is laughably ignored.

        All these empty locations for these corporations to advertise products and “experiences”

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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          To look pretty for people to try out different brands of bed because we like to not figure out a universal solution to the problem of making a comfortable healthy platform of material that we can lay upon for long term rest.

          We’ll do that as soon as we invent the universal spine.

            • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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              I think his point is that any universal bed will be comfortable for some people and uncomfortable for others because people are different.

              • Acters@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                I said solution, not one bed to rule them all lol

                We need something that can scientifically determine a way to get people an affordable and comfortable bed that is not just go into a giant waste of space filled with random mattresses in hopes you find the right one and will likely just pick one that is “just good enough” after a minute or two from laying on it, When its use case is meant for laying on it for about 8 hours

        • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          IKEA and Costco both sell relatively affordable bedding and furniture solutions.

          Also, there are some delivery only bed companies. Ie Purple Mattress.

          Some people insist on actually trying out the mattress first and spending $4,000+ on a bed.

    • gmtom@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Has been for a while. During the big exodus from reddit we brought with us lots of typical redditors that think being a contrarian dickhead makes them cool.

      As well as lots of the usually sad little losers from across the internet that see people enjoying themselves and get the irresistible urge to make things worse.

      • otter@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        “irresistible urge”, sure, but I wouldn’t give them credit for making things worse. Sure, they snicker at sticking their old gum under the desk, but it’s a whole set of other issues that’re burning down the building in the meantime.

        • masquenox@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You’ll shit your pants when you will learn that liberal is center right right-wing on anywhere else but the US.

          There is no such thing as “center-right” - the only differentiator between one right-winger and the next is how comfortable they happen to be with the violence that maintains their precious status quo.

          Liberals are just right-wingers that prefer the violence happening somewhere where they don’t have to witness it.

    • Lianodel@ttrpg.network
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      1 year ago

      There’s a ghastly number of people who are aggressively ignorant assholes.

      The point is that we don’t have people sleeping on the street for a lack of… anything, really. Including beds. The point is that, when nearly everything is run for-profit, and it’s even slightly more profitable to let people suffer and even die, then people will suffer and die. We do a better job selling beds than we do making sure everyone has a bed to sleep in. We could make sure everyone has access to a warm bed, shelter, food, medicine, etc., but we don’t, and it’s less and less acceptable to just accept the status quo just because it’s the status quo. If someone thinks the status quo is defensible, it’s on them to defend it.

      That doesn’t mean the mattress seller is evil, or (and I can’t understand the logic in one of the other comments) that wanting people to be housed makes you a hypocrite if you have your own housing. And the absolutely shameless comments that openly admit they won’t (really can’t) explain their position, but are going to condescend anyway.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      I think people’s issue with it is it’s just not very well thought out.

      The bed store would never under any circumstance provide the bed for homeless people to access what world would that ever happen in? The problem is the homeless person doesn’t have access to shelter but that’s not the fault of the bed store that’s the fault of the state.

      The image seems to suggest that the bed store are holding all the beds for some kind of weird show of economic supremacy rather than you know the fact that it’s a display room. No one’s buying those beds they’re display models.

      No one is arguing that homeless people shouldn’t be held but that particular image isn’t really anything.

      • Daft_ish@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You’ve understood about 90% of the argument. That 10% is capitalism is the link between the bed store and the homeless person.

        BTW, let’s all go hold a homeless person. Unintentional wholesomeness.

      • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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        Why don’t we just convert all the bed stores into homeless shelters?

        That way you can try out a bed, get some feedback from actual users (the homeless sleeping on the bed), all the store profits can go to pay for housing the homeless, AND government won’t have to provide public housing!

        It’s a win-win, kill 2 birds with 1 stone.

    • Gladaed@feddit.de
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      But there being a salespoint for bed does not take home from the homeless. The issue is them being without shelter.

      This is Symbolik, but not the issue at hand. Also turning commercial buildings into flats does not seem like a good/efficient solution to a complex issue like homelessness. (Disregarding living out of a car homelessness)

      • Frittiert@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        The other guy said it perfectly:

        There’s a bed there, and there’s a human being sleeping on the ground.

        It really isn’t more complicated than that. Any explaination why this person is not allowed to sleep in this bed or why this person should not be able to sleep in this bed is absolute bullshit.

        There’s a bed there, and there’s a human being sleeping on the ground.

    • WindowsEnjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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      Well, bed is not necessary since you can sleep anywhere as long as you can lie down. To make bed - trees were cut, the ecosystem were damaged. The birds who had their nest in those trees lost their home. Is this worth it?? /s

  • Rhoeri@lemmy.world
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    I don’t get it… is that store supposed to let people in to sleep on their beds?

    • kadotux@sopuli.xyz
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      It’s a critique on capitalism, where we have the technology and products to improve our quality of life but restrict access to them for a considerable percentage of humas. You’re welcome.

        • anar@lemmy.ml
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          No. In utopian society there wouldn’t be the person who doesn’t have a bed.

            • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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              But there is the assumption that bed showrooms need to be filled with inventory so that people can decide what bed they want to buy while others don’t even have a bed.

              I’m not communist because I think skill and effort should be rewarded. But I guess you could say I’m basic need communist in that I think society should do their best to ensure everyone has their basic needs met and rewards those supplying those basic needs beyond their own basic needs.

              Luxury options and upgrades should be waiting until after everyone has the base version. And that base version should be efficiently and effectively designed, not designed deliberately to make the user want to upgrade.

          • ahornsirup@sopuli.xyz
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            There’s always going to be people who fall through the cracks in your safety net because they for some (usually mental health related) reason just can’t integrate into the framework of society. You can offer help, but even without conditions attached there’s going to be people who will refuse it.

            • Daft_ish@lemmy.world
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              I don’t think the issue in America is that we’ve tried the best we can but some have slipped through the cracks. More along the lines of we’ve tried nothing and we are all out of ideas.

        • kadotux@sopuli.xyz
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          The systemic solution is not a utopian communist society, but a system which provides beds for those who need it. The picture highlights this problem.This is not a critique on the showroom, or the store owner (which is how you interpreted it), this is a critique on society. You were the one who muddied the waters (and assumed that someone is proposing a communist society, another argument fallacy). The point is not “letting homeless people use the showroom beds” but rather “letting homeless people use beds”.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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            Considering we have multiple people suggesting that the homeless person should, in fact, be allowed to sleep in that bed, I think that a lot of people are interpreting it that way.

            • kadotux@sopuli.xyz
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              The part where you did actually muddy the waters is that you assumed that the picture depicts problems in a “showroom - homeless person” context, which is clearly not the case (as you contradictingly say yourself and even recognize when you said: “when “capitalism” is written on the photo”). The picture clearly criticizes capitalism as a economic system, but you wanted to make the showroom the focus point of the photo. That is muddying the waters. You dismiss the original critique. Or at least that’s how I read your comment. The difference between “I was talking about multiple points” and “muddying the waters” is not that big.

              On the other part, yeah, fair enough. I would compare it to a “utopian socialist society” rather than communistic, but sure whatever. I mean there are countries in the world where taking this picture is very easy, and some (socialist) countries where it’s take a bit of effort to find a situation like this to photograph in the first place (most nordic european countries, for example).

              The whole point of the image we are both commenting is a critique on capitalism. You are moving the point slightly towards “critique on showroom owners”.

              However let’s not get sidetracked here. In a utopian society there would be showrooms, yes. But the person would not be forced to sleep outside without a bed in such a society, be there showrooms or not. That is the point. Capitalism allows this, a socialist society doesn’t (just look at the countries with least homeless people and you’ll see)

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                  I am fixating on the thing that relates to this picture. It seems to me (honestly, I don’t mean to come off as an ass) that your 2nd point of discussion is very much my “muddying the water” point. I don’t want to discuss that point, as that was totally irrelevant here. If I understood correctly, your 2 points were: (I’m paraphrasing, but) “I don’t understand, why showroom owners should let homeless people sleep inside their premises” and “every other economic system besides capitalism also has these qualities”

                  Right? And I think I have provided arguments against both of these. What am I missing?

      • SkyeStarfall
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        “kids”

        You are not superior for not having empathy for homeless people

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            I certainly think they will get nothing if people don’t have empathy for them.

            You’d be surprised by how far just caring can go. And by that, I mean genuinely, empathically, caring.

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                You would still need to the wherewithal to identify that help is needed. Be it empathy from within or external, if no one cared it would never reach even the lukiest of warm persons desk.

    • FaeDrifter@midwest.social
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      Yeah, we should own those dirty communist propagandists by housing every homeless person.

      The commies will be sooo owned if we do that.

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        Social democrats*

        It’s like communism but it works, and you don’t even have to kill minorities like you do on communism.

        • Cowbee@lemm.ee
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          Why does Communism necessitate killing minorities, and why are you assuming Social Democracies haven’t killed minorities?

          Do you think tools have a mystical property that requires the owners to turn evil if they are collectively owned, rather than privately?

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            Why does Communism necessitate killing minorities, and why are you assuming Social Democracies haven’t killed minorities?

            Good question, let’s hope you are able to have a civil conversation!

            First of all, every communist regime has systemically killed off their minorities. Social democrat governments haven’t. I hope that clears it up. If you come across social democratic governments systematically killing minorities, let me know though.

            Do you think tools have a mystical property that requires the owners to turn evil if they are collectively owned, rather than privately?

            Like I said earlier, the underlying economic model under the fascism is irrelevant to the millions of minorities having being killed by communist regimes.

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              Every country has systemically killed off minorities.

              Show me exactly where the mystical property of tools comes in, where collective ownership turns people evil. If you can’t, then Communism does not necessitate genocide.

              It’s that simple.

              • SaakoPaahtaa@lemmy.world
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                Every country had systemically killed off minorities.

                Did I say talk about countries or governments? Keep it on topic

                If you can’t, then Communism does not necessitate genocide.

                Again, I don’t support transphobia, I just so happen to support communism which is a form of fascism which historically has systematically slaughtered transgendered people :)

                Fuck you fascist.

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                  Ah, you’re a troll, checks out. For your information, the Weimar Republic was a failing Social Democracy that led to Nazi Germany, which was responsible for the Holocaust. Even Social Democracy isn’t a perfectly innocent system, nor can anyone truthfully say that unrelated systems necessitate the presence of each other.

                  I support collective ownership of the Means of Production, which will eventually lead to a Stateless, Classless, Moneyless society. I don’t particularly subscribe to any particular flavor of leftism, as each country will get there a different way. As such, I’m simply a leftist. Decentralization, equality, and Democracy are critical to human happiness, which will necessitate trans liberation. To call me transphobic is projection.

                  All in all, you’re nothing more than a troll who believes tools have mystical qualities that necessitate genocide if people share them. You can’t actually logically prove this point so you dodge and resort to calling me a transphobic fascist, despite being the opposite.

                  There’s no use in continuing this convo, you asked me to be civil and yet you immediately out yourself as a troll and spew slander.

        • masquenox@lemmy.world
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          you don’t even have to kill minorities like you do on communism.

          TIL… Derek Chauvin is really a communist.

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                Are you unaware that fascism is an umbrella term for many things such as communism and national socialism? I mean I know you’d rather suppress that fact but still, quite delusional

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                  TIL… serving capitalism makes you communist.

                  Do tell… do you also apply this “logic-that-must-be-good-because-I-pulled-it-out-of-my-ass” in other parts of your life?

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          Finland has a housing first policy. The homeless often have multiple problems that prevent them from getting a home the normal way (e.g. drug problems that cause them to get evicted). Instead of insisting people get better while homeless, they’re given homes first and treatment for their other problems after. This coupled with welfare transfers that ensure you never end up homeless just because of lack of money leads to low homeless numbers.

        • Cowbee@lemm.ee
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          Yes, Finland does this precisely by rejecting Capitalism and giving homeless people homes. This is not a Capitalistic solution.

          I get what you’re saying, you can have a majority Capitalist society and still solve homelessness, but the answer will never be Capitalism.

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      Why? I’m not going to avoid pointing to the source of a problem just because people don’t want to hear it.

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      Yeah you’d think most of our societies problems are a direct cause of late stage capitalism cresting a system where only profits matter and once its not profitable to feed or house someone then they are left to starve and go homeless or something. Haha I’m so glad that’s not the case, haha…

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    Wasteful is the wrong word. Waste implies this is some kind of poor planning, inefficiency or oversight.

    Capitalism truly is all about efficiency, literally at the expense of basic humanity.

    This isn’t unintentional waste, this is intentional separation of the poor from resources. This is intentional artificial scarcity. The fact that many are literally separated from and thus lack a bed (or a roof, or food, etc) is what makes a bed a more valuable commodity for those with enough capital to purchase one from the private owner class through vendors like this one. If basic twin beds were publically available or subsidized, it would lower the capital value and profit potential of the swankier beds. And that is something the owners won’t tolerate.

    Under unrestrained market capitalism, there need to be people dying in the streets, otherwise people won’t appreciate the capital value of purchasing what they need to live.

    We Americans cast our sub-optimal capital batteries out to die of exposure. This is by design. If, as an American not born into wealth, you refuse or are unable to generate value for the owners directly, you will still have an important economic function you will be forced to fulfill: a capitalism scarecrow, meant to scare the wage slaves back to work on Monday, making money for the owners in exchange for minimal subsistence.

    We could house and shelter all our fellow Americans, it isn’t a matter of resources or space. We choose not to, and we also antagonize our powerless homeless as the villains selfishly lowering our property values by continuing to exist while destitute. We don’t, because market capitalism incentivises cruelty for profit, and we refuse to reign it in for fear of slowing its self serving growth/metastasis at the expense of the society it is supposed to serve.

    This is an image of our economy’s and society’s waste intential, greed incentivised cruelty. We Americans are a cruel people far more interested in getting more than our neighbors than entertaining being part of a society.

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    I’ve always pointed to the fact that over half the food in the US is left to rot until it ends up in a landfill yet food insecurity is rampant in the richest country in the world.

    When they send police to arrest people, including homeless people and parents trying to feed their kids, for dumpster diving behind grocery stores and some grocery stores now literally shred or pour bleach on the packages of still sealed food that they throw away, maybe it’s a sign that society needs a pretty major paradigm change on how goods and services should be distributed.

    When police arrest people for giving homeless people food, maybe we should question who they’re really here to serve and protect.

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      This is a chat between my husband and I the other day and I’ve just felt so sad about it since then. Horrific display of wastefulness to humans AND birds

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        Sigh, remember when small restaurants and bistros literally used to let employees take unsold food at the end of the day, and if there were still food left after going through the employees it would be set out on the counter for anyone else to take? Remember when that used to be a massive perk of working in food service?

        Apparently many large chain venues aren’t even letting employees take unsold food anymore, using “safety” as an excuse even though the sellable and unsellable food are often literally minutes apart.

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          I used to dumpster dive, and got told time and time again how disgusting it was, despite the fact that the food was packaged, inside a large trash bag with other non trash merch. You’d wear gloves and wash the packaging before opening as a precaution. It was no different to that item being in a plastic shopping bag, yet somehow the transition to inside a dumpster made people freak out about it.

          We’ve become so disillusioned about food, it’s crazy.

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      The point is that there are beds that nobody are using while people are forced to sleep on the ground. Because, yes, a store is unused at night.

      It’s about resources not being used as efficiently as they could be, because we are looking at the situation from a capitalist ideology point of view.

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          They are not, we have everything we need for all the 8 billion people living on this rock

          https://sharing.org/information-centre/articles/enough-everyone

          The first problem is the word “profit”, most people who can make astronomical differences, wont move a finger if there’s no profit in It.

          The second problem is logistics, it’s hard to get things around the globe in an organized fashion, and this is usually overcome with big incentives, which brings us to the first problem again.

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        The point is that there are beds that nobody are using while people are forced to sleep on the ground.

        If you let a guy sleep on it, then you can’t sell it. Who would buy it? The bed isn’t “not being used”, it’s not being used as a bed.

        It’s about resources not being used as efficiently as they could be

        There’s nothing inefficient about this allocation of resources.

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          Showroom beds are usually not the beds that are actually sold. The beds that get sold sit in storage.

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            The chances that person has bedbugs is non-zero. The chances they haven’t showered are also not exactly low. Putting them in a showroom bed could ruin it.

            I really want a solution to house people because it’s an untenable situation, but ‘let them sleep in a bed showroom’ is not a good solution.

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                The problem there is that sometimes ownership of a property is either lost or unclear. The woman across the street from us died. Her house has sat empty for years. No one seems to have claimed ownership of it. I doubt anyone is paying property taxes on it because whoever does own it doesn’t seem to be aware of it.

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                  Oh I realize that proposal is unreasonable and unrealistic. I’m just sick and tired of the people who are trying to make things better for others being the only ones that are supposed to compromise and “be reasonable.” The opposition has chosen violence and intransigency.

                  Far as that woman’s house is concerned, sounds like a good place to put a homeless squatter, who can then gain lawful ownership since no one else wants the place

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          Eh, bed stores are a particularly ridiculous waste of resources. The average bed store sells like 6-8 mattresses a month, which is inefficient and dumb.

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      Capitalism is when 27 empty houses per a homeless person, that are used as investments for the rich to play around with their imaginary numbers, while 99% of population struggle to survive.

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          I’m glad that the only problem with my comment you have is that number. Yeah, it might be described as slightly less than that, depending on how you define struggling, some people are perfectly fine with being one medical emergency away from a bankruptcy, and not struggling at all about it. But for the broader point it doesn’t matter, really.

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      “I interpreted the picture overly literally to the point it loses its meaning. I’m very smart”

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    You know what’s so sad about something like this?

    The conservative seeing this will opt to blame the individual. This conservative will most frequently espouse themselves to be a Christian nonetheless. “Jesus-like” in aspirations and idolatry.

    And yet, they’ll have the knee-jerk reaction to this image that is saying, “Well they put themselves in that position.”

    “It wasn’t the happenstance of birth locations,.”

    “It wasn’t the culmination of external forces and externalities building to this moment.”

    “It wasn’t the fact that their life was harder than my own.”

    “Or perhaps my life was hard and I’m using the survivor-bias fallacy to justify kicking the ladder out from under me.”

    The conservative believes there are lesser people who deserve what they get coming. It’s seemingly incomprehensible to them that we humans are quite literally of the same species, and that you must come to the conclusion one of two possibilities: Either (1) We are all a blank slate from the start and thus products of our environment. Nurture comprising the vast majority of what influences us. Which means those left out on the streets; those who take drugs in an ideal state of mind don’t want to be there, but are already too far broken from past experiences to reconcile their immediate choices (and need saved; protected; rehabilitated by the same outside forces that put them there in the fist place). Or (2) It is genetic, which means there is a predisposition incompatible with the inherently-flawed system we’ve built for ourselves. They’re a circle in a square system, and it’s thus just the same not their choice. And so again, the system should adapt and accommodate them just the same to promote a healthier society overall.

    THAT would be more Jesus-like. Not the lazy cop-out that casts them off as degenerates. Such people lack empathy and cannot comprehend the bigger picture.

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      I’d not just put it on the conservative. They are being brainwashed by a larger force that puts money as a goal above people. Eg: sackler and his punching down motion to witch hunt addicts in order to try to save the OxyContin face.

      As a result the easily influenced will go as far as see humans as subhumans if they threaten the almighty dollar. No doubt they are already in the tipping point as you said too. A perfect storm of apathy.

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      You know what? I was going to methodically refute each thing, but you’re so wrong that I’ll just say you’re wrong and then this: you assuming things about people and boxing them up as your own preconceived “stereotypes” is a way more toxic trait than your street side christian hypocrisy.

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        “I was gonna, but then I decided to just call you toxic cause I don’t like the things you said, and this way I don’t actually have to have a nuanced opinion or refute anything.”

        but at least you got to feel morally superior for a bit after posting, right?

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          I specified the behavior that I don’t like, and have said what I had to say. Further rebuttal would be pointless, because you can’t argue with stupid.

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          And another reason I didn’t put so much effort in is because that comment made me mad. This person managed to smear two separate groups of people in the same paragraph, quite thoroughly, while also being incredibly narrow. I don’t think that the descriptions actually represent the majority of these two groups of people. Perhaps it does describe some of the people in the middle of the Venn diagram, but certainly not all. You can’t just go around accusing entire groups of people of being “bad”. That makes you no better than Trump.

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            You didnt put any effort in, you saw something you didn’t like because you disagree so you just decided to pretend to have some sort of bag of tricks to prove your point, for some inane reason.

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        There are two types of Christians.

        1. The fake ones. Ultra-conservative. Personal responsibility blah blah blah.
        2. The real ones. Saved by grace, not by works. These are very rare. Some churches do not have a single one.
  • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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    The real capitalist crime is that a mattress sells for such ridiculous prices that they charge thousands of dollars for a chunk of foam and some springs.

    Most mattress stores print money, and only need to make 4 sales a month to stay in business.

    They are insanely overpriced. Why doesn’t everyone just buy cheap beds from Costco and IKEA?!

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      I will say that sleeping on ikea beds wreck my back. I’m not arguing that beds are over priced, but not all beds are built the same. Unfortunately I needed a pricier mattress to suit my needs.

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      IKEA used to sell great mattresses, but when I had to replace my old one a few years ago they only had hard and semi-hard ones.

      And over time the mattress I ended up buying because they didn’t sell the one I wanted anymore sunk in and has formed an uncomfortable indent.

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    But the shareholders need to be able to extract a return in return for no work - we couldn’t give others a shot at dignity.

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      “You don’t like an athrocity? But what about that other athrocity on the other side of the globe? Check, mate. I am very intelligent.”

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      2 head pillows for some people who are restless and would keep moving in the bed, so they don’t miss any pillow zone with their heads. One for hugging. One for spooning them from behind for emotional support. One for crotch support to keep male reproduction organs comfortable by giving a bit of space between legs when sleeping on the side.

      Remove one spooning or hugging pillow when having 2 people sleep in the same bed, then multiply the rest. You get 21, and that is the number of pillows you shall have.