What Charles says is important, and draws attention to the other side  
of the basic income coin: education. Currently, most education in  
North America, from K through 12, aims to 'socialize' students to be  
useful employees, albeit at different levels of the ladder. There is  
much to be said about how this could change so that people value and  
are ready for more autonomy and diversity in their lives.  A model of  
this different kind of education is called "service learning", a  
boring term for an exciting concept.  Google it. This is already big  
in the US, just getting started in Canada. Education based on this  
model would fit basic income to a T.

See what you think.  Sally Lerner


On 24-Jul-09, at 8:59 AM, Arthur Cordell wrote:

> I think what Charles is implying that rights must be coupled with
> responsibilities.  We have morphed into an entitlement society and a  
> GAI
> should not be just one more thing the state supplies.  There must be  
> some
> "social development" or some sort of social cohesion so that when
> cross-subsidization takes place (as it does in all communities),  
> there is a
> sense of responsibility to the whole, to the community.
>
> Paying taxes willingly implies a sense of being open to cross- 
> subsidization.
> It is payment with a purpose.  Being on the GAI end should imply  
> acceptance
> as part of a social contract.
>
> Arthur
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Charles  
> Brass
> Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2009 9:51 PM
> To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
> Subject: Re: [Futurework] about some things going across the  
> futureworks
> list
>
> This sequence began with Arthur suggesting a guaranteed minimum  
> income as a
> way
> of dealing with a perceived impending lack of jobs for many.  It has  
> come to
> be
> about money(in part because I asked how a gmi might be funded) and  
> there is
> much to say on that front.
>
> However, I don't believe that money is the key issue (though I do  
> believe
> that
> our current money systems are breaking down if not actually  
> broken).  The
> key
> issue is this sentence taken from Tim's post below:
>
> A basic rule of  economics, I mean real economics, not monetary  
> delusions,
> is
> that you do not import  what you can make locally. To keep everybody
> employed,
> and income distributed correctly, you put increased productivity into
> increased
> leisure time rather than increased profit taking.
>
> Sorry, Tim, this highlights a fundamental misunderstanding about  
> economics
> (including what 'profit taking' means) but much as I would like to  
> explore
> that
> the key issue is this notion of 'increased leisure time' being some  
> sort of
> ultimate goal.
>
> The unemployed have ultimate leisure time.  And in countries like mine
> (Australia) at least they have nearly enough money to enjoy it.   
> Yet, they
> continually complain that they are bored and they are  
> overrepresented in
> crime
> and other social dysfunction statistics.
>
> Until we do a lot of human development work, giving people more  
> leisure time
> (even assuming we can do this economically) have proven to be a  
> recipe for
> disaster.
>
>
> It seems to me that what people want is to feel like their lives are  
> making
> a
> contribution, and that some of that contribution rubs off on them  
> (ie that
> they
> get at least some discretionaly enjoyment opportunities as a  
> result).  In
> our
> modern world, that translates into - they want do useful work and to  
> earn
> enough to spend discretionally.  And, as I have said before, there  
> is more
> than
> enough useful work to go around if just we can work out how to  
> distribute
> and
> value it properly.
>
> regards
>
>
>
> --
> Charles Brass
> mobile 0409 198 738
>
>
> Quoting tim rourke <[email protected]>:
>
>> Often very interesting things come across this list. I  have
>> monitored it for  years but said little on it.
>>
>> It has  some of the usual problems with internet discussion lists
>> which are  not strictly monitored.  You have a lot of people with
>> ideological  type cognitive problems  promoting their hobby horses.
>> And a lot of people  who think they are taking art in some sort of
>> debate, who  would not  form or follow a coherent line of thought if
>> their lives depended on it.
>>
>> I do not have much patience for this.   On some occasions when I
>> challenge   ridiculous thinking, I  get a really vicious,
>> narcissistic type of response and  sometimes   dumped off the list,
>> so I do not bother  much anymore with  trying to correct net
>> nonsense. I look for discussion lists, boards, and blogs where people
>> are not allowed to post drivel.
>>
>> Here are a few points I want to make. I know a bit about Basic
>> Incomes because I  run a web site on the topic in Toronto. There are
>> a lot of people shooting their  faces off about this, too, without
>> thinking it out and  knowing what they are talking about. They claim
>> to be supporters, but they discredit the idea.
>>
>> One idea  is that the cost of a BI program would be reduced because
>> part of the income gets taxed back.  Nobody really into BI or other
>> things the same idea is called, supports  that idea.  There is no
>> sense in  giving people money and taxing it back. It is not
>> politically supportable to give a Basic Income to a people who are
>> already very wealthy. This is the "wealthy banker's wife"  dilemma.
>>
>> There is a cutoff where a Basic Income starts to be gradually
>> withdrawn and  Income taxes gradually imposed. One test of how good a
>> model of a Basic Income is, is  how much of the population will be on
>> the 'get' side, and how much on the  'give' side.  The ideal is to
>> have the top 20% of the population paying.
>>
>> This is how civilization is supposed to work; everybody   receives
>> according to  his or her real needs.  Taxes are imposed on those who
>> have  more than they need in order to  have an economy and a
>> democracy.  Massive concentrations of wealth  should never be  
>> tolerated.
>>
>> When concentration of wealth is tolerated, as it is now, the wealthy
>> begin playing with their money and abusing the unchecked power their
>> wealth gives them.  They start to confuse wealth with money , as
>> though   playing with money was  what  the economy is about and
>> making  the things  needed  for living is trivial. "Manufacturing can
>> take care of itself". Pft!
>>
>> We are now getting the results of this, where  one country   has an
>> economy totally based on military power and exacting tribute form the
>> rest of the world. It can no longer make anything except weapons.  It
>> thinks it can just get everything from China; the proles   at home
>> are too uppity.
>>
>> So now it has a huge balance of payments problem. The Chinese do not
>> want their money anymore.  In about another year they are going to
>> run out of  capacity to  pay for their imports and they are going to
>> start collapsing.
>>
>> They will spend about a generation rebuilding their economy,
>> relearning how to make things, how to do things, how to act like
>> human beings again, and what civilization is.
>>
>> A basic rule of  economics, I mean real economics, not monetary
>> delusions, is that you do not import  what you can make locally. To
>> keep everybody employed, and income distributed correctly, you put
>> increased productivity into increased leisure time rather than
>> increased profit taking.
>>
>> People are also  learning that in order to  maintain  the land base
>> on which civilization depends, demand must be restricted  to what
>> that land base can support. It is not; how high  can we pump up
>> production and consumption? It is;  how can we satisfy all needs with
>> the least effort and least resources?
>>
>> Where a Basic income fits into this is that it  helps to break the
>> control of  an owner class over people's lives, so they can  work for
>> their benefit, not someone else's. When everyone is  assured of their
>> basic well being, then they are prepared to  accept less and to share
>> the  world with  other people.
>>
>> History is an endless conflict between civilized people and the cro-
>> magnons. The latter cannot  grasp civilization; they see it as
>> something they can exploit. They see themselves as in competition
>> with everyone, instead of   having a common interest.  They need to
>> finally be removed from  power and segregated away from the  normal
>> human being, so we can finally complete the evolution of the human
>> and the fully developed civilization in which  we humans can thrive.
>>
>> That is enough. tr
>> _______________________________________________
>> Futurework mailing list
>> [email protected]
>> https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
>>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Futurework mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
>
> _______________________________________________
> Futurework mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to