So, basically "protection money".
"Protection money" implies extortion. Is keeping good brakes and tires on your vehicle extortion, or a simple safety precaution that actually saves money due to lowered risk of accident?
I don't fault your motives but I believe your focusing on the wrong aspect.
Eh, it's the topic of this discussion, I've talked about schools before. Besides, kids don't learn if they don't value the education, and when their 'plan' is to suck on the government teat like their parent, even the best funded school in the world can't help but the tiny fraction that are born self-motivated.
If the flow is threatened violent responses result in a bigger teat.
If they get violent, then jail, prison, and other punishments as appropriate. It's expensive and I don't like it, hell, bring in caning. The quicker they figure out that they need to contribute, the better.
Basically I agree with you, this is supposed to be a system that acts as a safety net that actually has a ladder back up that's easily accessible.
You figure wrong. You do not understand the mentality. Take public housing as an example. I worked for a time in a public housing agency, so I have some first-hand experience.
Public housing is gone under my UBI program, remember? And you can't just tell me that I'm wrong. You have to come up with a logical argument as to why I'm wrong.
People who think like that aren't interested in bettering themselves. Deal with it.
On Momma's actions, here is my surprised face:
Oh, I understand the attitude. Mom and Son deserve charges for theft and/or vandalism, as appropriate. That said, it goes back to my core assumption:
Greed combined with messed up rewards is a perfect explanation for their actions. Personally, I'd recommend caning in response. It tends to leave a lasting impression while being cheap.
Here's the deal: Under the UBI, they're renting from a commercial company. Unless the boss of that company is rather lenient, the response to the activity would be eviction, not replacement.
And they'd know that, so therefore wouldn't do it.
It's all a question of what behavior you reward. I don't guarantee
jack except $500 per month. You want to replace your fridge? Buy a new one. Just wrecked yours expecting a new one? Tough *expletive deleted*it, eat canned food and do without refrigeration until you can save up for a new one. It'd be quite a learning experience for many of them.
Part of the problem, as I see it, is that when they're provided housing that's nicer than they 'require', they're more or less free to convert the excess 'niceness' into other things. They don't value it because it's non-transferrable. With the UBI idea, they can live in the cheapest shithole they can find, and use the excess money on other things. It's part of why it's cheaper to just provide cash to people than to try to provide benefits. Because inevitably, people insist that they get nicer stuff than the people themselves would get if they had the choice.
I'll point to the last three elections as proof. 2008: Overwhelming Democratic turnout. Especially their "Base" urban poor.
Okay, the extreme poor are overwhelmingly democrat.
But they don't actually get out and vote. If the poor actually did at rates comparable to the middle class and higher, Hillary would have been president.
Note: I didn't say that they didn't vote liberal. I said that they don't bother showing up to the polling stations, most of the time. Those that do tend to vote liberal and for free *expletive deleted*it, yes, no dispute there.
The FSA turned out again to reelect Obama.
FSA? Flexible Spending Account? Food Services of America? Farm Service Agency? None seem appropriate for your use, and that's what's on the first page of a google search.
And you are going to vote for the person that gives you what you want, like more gun rights, lower taxes, less regulations. Whether or not Joe Shitbird gets more or less .gov freebies might not even make the Top Ten in Things You Look For In A Candidate.
True that, but I've already acknowledged that my plan isn't happening anytime soon in today's political climate, so why bring it up again? I'm just arguing the technical merits.
I'm tired of paying the Danegeld....If it's to prevent them from rioting, then let it burn. From what I have witnessed, they only harm themselves when they do that...
I'm looking to prevent a repeat of the French Revolution, us losing our heads over this stuff. But the problem is, after they burn their own *expletive deleted*it, are they going to stay there, or start hitting up new neighborhoods?
The IRS is filled with retards, and I use that in the most kindest sense of the word.
Well then, it's a good thing we're not actually asking them to do anything new, isn't it? They don't need to be "giants". Remember my mentioning the Nirvana fallacy. *expletive deleted*it don't have to be perfect, just better than before.
Both in business for 15+ years. They get audited. The lady* that has a childcare business this year and hair salon next and each year make right at the peak of the EIC bell curve.....crickets. (And yes, I have refused to do those returns I suspect of fraud.)
That's because they know they can't make their money back from the lady, she doesn't have enough income to matter. The real shops? They do.
The ACA has been one giant fluctercluck each year.
I'm able to summarize my plan in a single page. The ACA was several phonebooks of lawmaking that
nobody read the entirety of before passing.
Again, Actively managed mutual fund vs index fund.
I know of no one that has been audited or even called to the carpet for lying about having insurance.
You might not have, but my mom(an accountant) has. Quite extremely expensively for a few of them.
All you have to do is check the box "YES". The only times I've seen the IRS get involved is if you got insurance through the Marketplace. Then you have to fill out the form with you policy number(s). Claim to have it through your employer, they don't check. Claim to have Medicaid, they don't check. Claim to have gotten on your own without going through Healthcare.gov, they don't check.
Funny thing is, I live in a state that's exempt(we don't have any plans that meet the affordability requirements for the penalty), and both Tricare and the VA send me letters showing that I was covered.
Sorry, but the All-Seeing, All Knowing, Omnipotent OZ IRS? A bunch of overwhelmed, incompetent, 'tards.
Since when is an omnipotent IRS required? Nirvana fallacy again. Keep in mind that I was restricting the changes they need to make to only the tax tables.
Summary:
1. I know they're 'lazy' pieces of *expletive deleted*it. I also know that many are quite cunning in their own way and will respond to any reward system in a greedy and lazy way. You know,
just like the rest of us. We're just on different local optimizations. So the trick is to avoid poor optimizations, to make it such that there isn't any local optimums while dependent upon welfare.
2. I know that there will be Fraud, Waste, and Abuse. There always is, especially in an organization as big as the IRS. You apply the usual controls against it and move on with life. If things were as bad as you try to imply it is, we'd have a completely non-functional government.
3. Trying to use a vastly more complicated policy as an example of how my drastically simpler policy will fail is unmoving. Somebody doesn't have to be able to assemble a working engine from scratch to change the oil.