Posting this in lieu of telling earl to GFH (but also lol at the philosophy that people should vote for who they want, but then blaming someone else for people not voting for Bernie FOH)
6/29/2020 10:40:37 AM
really lol at anyone feeling the need to respond to Earl
6/29/2020 10:45:39 AM
I still find the bill and the language in the quoted text problematic. Lets see if you can spot why.
6/29/2020 11:47:55 AM
People need support, yes, but preventing eviction for a year needs serious evaluation. The article does suggest multiple sides could be pursued, e.g. supply side payments that keep people from being at risk of eviction, full stop and forgiveness on rents and the mortgages landlords have on those rents, etc..., but my initial response is one of extreme caution. if the goal is to keep people from investing in existing properties, as to keep the property supply liquid, reducing the impossible reach of home ownership for some many americans, then I feel it. But, there are other ways to handle that goal and this bill seems like it adversely impacts much of the housing supply chain.i.e. if renters don't pay, landlords are still on the hook for mortgages. if mortgages are stayed, then mortgages holders aren't making revenues, which impacts their ability to pay staff. if we're in a situation that landlords cannot evict renters- it's already pretty hard actually- then landlords will stop investing in homes. This will increase the supply of some housing, which will reduce the value of individuals' homes, an unfortunate occurrence since that is the primary source of wealth building for many Americans, and it will discourage investment in large scale rental complexes because no one will want to build investments for which the government could one day prevent rent collection, reducing supply and putting upward pressure on existing multiple family units. These don't even address the 'how would we pay for it.' question or the moral hazard of preventing evictions for individuals in upscale housing (private homes, nice apartment complexes) but not funding adequate housing for those who are already homeless and or in really rundown projects. I may be missing something, but these impacts seem both obvious and material. The likely scenario here is that Warren is just pandering to her base, much like some of the democrat bills that went toward $10K/month per household in UBI.
6/29/2020 12:28:48 PM
6/29/2020 1:16:16 PM
6/29/2020 1:46:48 PM
My preference is for direct cash stimulus to individuals over all other forms of safety net, but this country has shown time and again it’s unwilling to go that route, unless you’re a corporation or bank. This bill is an imperfect stopgap for the recession that we are about to slog through, but at least it attempts to help average working people.The bill doesn’t protect everyone in the housing supply chain, but investments are risky, by definition. I value keeping families in their homes above guaranteeing investors a profit. Keeping millions of families in their homes provides greater utility to society and will without a doubt pay dividends in the short to medium term future. Investor profits will just go toward buying more real estate or another yacht, increasing inequality, which is bound to explode in our faces in the short to medium term.
6/29/2020 5:03:47 PM
6/30/2020 7:59:25 AM
6/30/2020 11:26:39 AM
6/30/2020 11:59:21 AM
^^There are some really decent older threads on here regarding BI and its pretty interesting that both TWW liberals and TWW conservatives have been on board with moving that direction for many years now (some, not all obviously). ^Charity, I suppose. Same as the people that trade their SNAP benefits for booze today.
6/30/2020 12:57:41 PM
6/30/2020 1:22:43 PM
nobody blows their cash stimulus and nobody trades SNAP for boozequit watching tucker carlson
6/30/2020 2:55:31 PM
6/30/2020 4:06:50 PM
6/30/2020 4:13:31 PM
^ The left should treat UBI with more suspicion for the reason you just mentioned, imo. The goal of the left should not merely be to raise worker wages, but rather to ultimately reduce the required work week while raising baseline social safety nets. You raise safety nets when you decommodify essential needs. If the end goal is to liberate workers from the drudgery of production so that they can live a dignified life complete with adequate leisure, then basic needs must be met outside of the market. The lack of a meaningful critique of UBI among the left is concerning, in my opinion.
6/30/2020 4:37:13 PM
UBI is a compromise I can get behind because although it is not a long-term solution, it would have an immediate direct impact on the lives of all people in the short term.
6/30/2020 4:42:40 PM
I think I've mentioned it on here before but the ideal UBI would consist of basic needs being met through social services, UBI for leisure. Not perfect by any means, but much better than what we have and probably the best we could hope for under a capitalist economy.
6/30/2020 5:58:09 PM
6/30/2020 6:36:56 PM
7/1/2020 11:17:07 AM
More ammo against a key facet of the Bernie bro myth, Biden enjoys more support from the left than the center. Thin margins, but at worst they're basically the same.
7/8/2020 10:21:34 AM
12/6/2020 2:23:52 AM
The dude barely won against a reviled president in the midst of a pandemic
12/6/2020 8:28:15 AM
Rural America simply isn’t buying what the dems are selling.
12/6/2020 11:16:04 AM
Most Americans are still terrified more of socialism than COVID, and while that's not really Joe Biden's fault, it's certainly his problem now. I'm sure a few of us who actually want to help and make this country a better place for everyone can relate, but others are thinking that fantasyland reality tv shitshow= "politics"Digging back through my posts, a few of my predictions came true, so here's another one. It's not very bold, but neither is Biden:He's not going to completely rescue the country from either "scary" version of reality the far extreme ends of the political spectrum pitched to us. It's going to be boring, because non-reality TV politics in a healthy democracy equates to some pretty dense reading material and most people in this country clearly have issues with basic literacy and even understanding of 8th grade level government. Trump gaslit half the country for four years and many people are surprised the election was as "close" as it was. He may have only won the most votes in history by 7 million votes, but he won the exact same number of EC votes that Trump did last time. If you're surprised at the way all of this is playing out, you haven't been paying attention (and who could blame you??), but maybe it's time to start now. Also, people really just fucking hated Hillary Clinton's guts. He seems like a decent man with a kind heart that had to learn a lot of really difficult lessons the hard way. I'd like to think he's one of those people who came out a better person after heartache and failure, and that he genuinely wants to help bring us together, despite being a damn near impossible task. At the very least, he'll do his best to try and restore the former dignity and decorum of the WH and teach Americans about what a healthier democracy can look like. But that's all he can really do, and that is nowhere near good enough for 330 million people, who can't decide what "freedom" really even means...We gotta do most of the work on our own, and we really need to work together to stop being so damn selfish and stupid. Myself 100% included. I'd rather be optimistic than pessimistic, but I hope you all are safe and OK. And FWIW, I'm happy TWW is back, even if it ruined my life there for a min back when I was 19-20 years old with the police blotter shit. Apparently, I had to learn a lot of lessons the hard way, too...[Edited on December 6, 2020 at 2:18 PM. Reason : .]
12/6/2020 2:17:39 PM
12/6/2020 2:31:36 PM
I honestly meant every word that I wrote. I came back to post what I posted as sort of a way to check my own reality, which was selfish I guess, but I really don't wanna waste 18 more years of my life being a dick to people on TWW anymore. It's probably a good thing it wasn't around for the past few months, because I have seen some really dark shit, and I'm learning that I should spend way more time writing shit down in my own damn journal than spouting off on here to feed my own ego with random strangers I didn't even really know to begin with.[Edited on December 6, 2020 at 2:41 PM. Reason : .]
12/6/2020 2:40:52 PM
12/6/2020 3:14:14 PM
12/6/2020 5:05:00 PM
Nah
12/6/2020 6:34:14 PM
If y'all wanna read the whole thing from start to finish, go for it. I did and it doesn't make me feel any better. I kinda feel [I]worse[/I] tbh. Being right all the time is fucking exhausting, because you'll inevitably be wrong about something eventually, and apologizing takes up time too.
12/6/2020 6:38:43 PM
haha and I'm not editing my post either
12/6/2020 6:39:13 PM
If you go back to summer of 2019, you were dead wrong about the most costly thing this entire cycle. Thinking that Warren had a better shot at winning the nomination than Bernie. It was clear back then when you were arguing against it that Warren being in the race was devastating Bernie and securing Biden's chances and that actually checked out the whole way through. but hey, at least Warren got that big cabinet position right?
12/6/2020 7:05:40 PM
Keep reading...
12/6/2020 7:19:30 PM
I successfully predicted the results of this primaries in many ways, like whom is gonna quit before whom at when. However, I didn't expect Trump's loss after I was influenced by some professors of politics major.
12/16/2020 10:10:21 AM