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by pokk
2877 days ago
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I think that is extremely unlikely. If you were to have a scale of the volatility of security where a zero is potentially being entirely on your own and a ten is a very modest utopia where everyone can perpetually live like a student then functioning universal basic income is probably an eight. Much of Europe today would be around a five, with the Nordic countries maybe a six. The US, being unique in many regards when it comes to developed countries, would today overall be a something like a three. Without even the most basic assistance it is probably a two. You don't just go from a two to an eight overnight. It is just so far from what exists today that it is a pretty safe bet that a functioning universal basic income system is never going to happen in the US. |
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I met some people in Alaska who were trying to approximate this.
a ten is a very modest utopia where everyone can perpetually live like a student
I guess some people historically would see it as a utopia. One's perspective changes with age and life experience. Some would find it depressing.