419
All landlords, all healthcare execs
(i.ibb.co)
- No Discrimination, this includes usage of slurs or other language intended to promote bigotry
- No defending oppressive systems or organizations
- No uncivil or rude comments to other users
- Discussion, not debate. This community is exclusively for genuine logical debate, any comments using whataboutism or similar will be removed.
- No genocide denial or support for genocidal entities. Anyone that supports the mass murder of civilians will be banned.
These guidelines are meant to allow open discussion and ensure leftists and post-leftists can have a voice. If you are here to learn, then welcome! Just remember that if you're not a part of the left (Liberals don't count) then you are a visitor, please do not speak over our members.
Matrix server: https://matrix.to/#/#libertyhub:matrix.org
My opinion? Obviously, there's a sliding scale of exploitation, but housing should be free, actually. The bank you paid your mortgage to was also exploiting you as well (in fact, even charging you interest). Everything is grim under capitalism.
A former landlord of ours gave us rental with option to buy, so the rent would have contributed to the purchase of the home, and we got a portion of that back when we had to move but couldn't afford a mortgage. Was this better than most landlords? Yes. Does it make it ok to charge people money to live? Hell, no.
I'm not perfect either though. We all have to live with our mistakes.
What are your thoughts on hotels, or similar short-term housing?
I personally favor returning to a gift economy that is more apt to discouraging the exchange of symbolic currency and the inevitable hoarding of resources it creates, but some might have other thoughts on this
Some video games have different currencies for different purposes, which stop you from taking the gold you hoarded and spending it on this other thing for no effort. Or we could copy something like how PTO from jobs works for "buying" things. Idk how well either would work, but I thought they were interesting ideas.
That's an interesting idea that lends itself to some nightmares, but maybe good things too. But I feel like people would quickly set up exchanges. If I have hotel credits I don't want to use and you have concert tokens you don't want to use , we'll try pretty hard to find a way to trade.
Seems like unique currencies for different transactions vs. one standardized state currency would certainly be a step in the right direction.
Isn't that essentially what we have now with foreign currencies? It doesn't seem to do much to curb international transactions, except create an industry of middle-men exchangers.
Maybe I misunderstood, but I was thinking more along the lines of: I'm a tailor, and you're a farmer. I need food now, but you will need 3 shirts in the future. I give you tokens to use for the shirts when you need them, and in exchange you give me some food. So it wouldn't be a state currency, but something we might use for convenience in agreeing to a trade. Admittedly, I just thought this was what was being discussed, and I haven't given it much further thought.
If we're doing digital currencies, there could be caps or diminishing returns put on things. I don't really have a problem with people exchanging based on what they prefer, it's the accumulation of wealth that could result that's a problem, and it seems like caps could solve that.